
What’s something AI agents still can’t do right now that you really wish they could?
I’ve been hunting and playing around with AI agents for a while now, and while the progress is impressive, I keep running into things that make me think: “Why can’t it just do this already?”
What’s one thing you wish agents could do today that they just can’t (yet)?
Could be anything:
Something you expected to be possible by now
Something you think we’re really close to
Something that seems obvious but is surprisingly hard
Or something totally futuristic and wild
Let’s share our future wish-lists here and maybe a new innovation will meet our expectations. :D
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Right now they can't realistically do marketing. Content they produce still has the "AI slop" tone of voice, and these agents often fail and break at a simple log-in screen, so it's way faster to just do it yourself or hire someone.
@frederikb - the fatigue of trying all of these tools in the hope that one can actually do what it says it can...
@frederikb @adelle_wood1 Hahah, probably there are more tools than users xD
@frederikb I agree, in most of the cases, I am dictating my original thoughts to AI and getting it rewritten with specific prompts to maintain my voice and style.
The ability to make longer videos that I can sync with my voiceover that I don't have to pay an arm and a leg for. I can make short flip screen videos with Adobe but it takes forever to find the right video or photo to match to the story I'm narrating.
@kris_keppeler I have ran into a similar issue with longer AI videos. This still needs more innovation and development. :)
All of my devices (phones to PCs) are touchscreens with smartpens. I am waiting to handwrite commands.
@dmitcha Ahh that's a good one!
IXORD
I think it would be good to have an AI support that helped solve problems with the product and issue invoices based on input data. This requires a huge amount of time for training. But there are times when describing the structure and automation is more difficult than talking to a real person and giving him a task.
@ixord That's a solid use case, Igor :)