TechCrunch News 01月09日
CES 2025 was full of IRL AI slop
index_new5.html
../../../zaker_core/zaker_tpl_static/wap/tpl_guoji1.html

 

2025年CES展会上,许多公司仍在探索AI的实际应用。展出的AI产品如智能调味器、AI空气炸锅和AI游戏助手等,似乎并非用户真正需求。这些产品虽具备AI功能,但实用性存疑,例如智能调味器需要购买专用胶囊,AI空气炸锅的菜谱扫描功能也并非刚需。AI游戏助手虽然能提供游戏建议,但存在延迟和干扰问题。这些现象反映了AI行业在过度炒作下的盲目尝试,为了追求商业利益,厂商们在AI技术不成熟的情况下,将AI应用于各种产品,导致出现许多不实用甚至有些可笑的产品。这揭示了AI技术在实际应用中面临的挑战,以及行业对AI的过度期望。

🧂智能调味器Spicerr:配备触摸屏的智能调味器,虽然能学习用户口味并推荐菜谱,但需使用昂贵的专用胶囊,且不具备研磨功能,实用性存疑。

🍳AI空气炸锅ChefMaker 2:具备菜谱扫描和烹饪时间计算功能,但该功能并非用户刚需,且目前AI技术在烹饪领域的应用仍不成熟。

🎮AI游戏助手Project Ava:作为“AI游戏副驾驶”,通过截取屏幕画面并给出游戏建议,但存在延迟、干扰游戏音频等问题,且其训练数据来源存在争议。

💰AI行业现状:2023年美国AI公司融资高达970亿美元,行业为追求商业利益而盲目尝试AI应用,导致许多AI产品华而不实,反映了AI技术发展的不成熟和过度炒作问题。

It’s 2025, and companies still don’t know what AI is good for.

That’s the impression I got from this year’s CES, which featured AI-powered kitchen appliances, baby cribs, and other products that really weren’t calling for AI.

See: Spicerr, an “intelligent” touchscreen-equipped spice dispenser that learns your taste as you cook to recommend unique recipes.

Spicerr’s utility is a little questionable to begin with. Spicerr doesn’t grind, and it takes $15-$20 proprietary capsules that can’t be refilled. Setting all that aside, were people really itching for a meal-suggesting salt and pepper shaker to begin with?

Elsewhere at the show, there was Dreo’s ChefMaker 2, an AI-powered air fryer. Yep, you read that correctly — AI-powered air fryer.

The concept isn’t as outlandish as Spicerr, mind you. ChefMaker 2 can extract recipes from cookbooks via a page-scanning feature, and even handle the tricky math of calculating cooking times and temps.

But is cookbook scanning really a feature the air-fryer-buying public demanded? Speaking as a member myself, I can’t say it’s ever occured to me — and that appears to be true of most folks.

Image Credits:Dreo

Remarkably, CES had even weirder AI products in store.

Razer’s Project Ava, inexplicably named after the killer robot in the 2014 movie “Ex Machina,” is an “AI gaming copilot,” as the company describes it. Ava basically plays games for you without actually playing games for you. With permission, Ava captures stills of your computer screen, then gives pointers (e.g. “Dodge when the blade spins”).

As The Verge’s Sean Hollister writes, Ava is controversial in that it was evidently trained on gaming guides, yet doesn’t credit the authors. It’s also distracting. At least in its current form, Ava is on a several-second delay, and it interrupts the game’s audio to give instructions.

I must ask once again: Who was clamoring for this, exactly? Who’s going to use it on a regular basis, much less pay for it?

So far as I can tell, the out-there AI products at CES are a symptom of the industry’s unrestrained hype. AI companies raised $97 billion last year in the U.S. alone, enough to buy 42 Spheres. Vendors are throwing AI spaghetti at the wall to see what sticks, because there’s little downside to doing so — and massive potential upside.

In many cases, they’re also running up against the limitations of AI as we know them. Figuring out which use cases of AI are technically feasible as been a formidable challenge for the industry. Often, it’s led to over-promising — under-delivering. ChatGPT still gets things wrong. Image generators are historically inaccurate. And characters in AI videos blend into each other’s bodies.

So we’re stuck with IRL AI slop: air fryers, spice dispensers, and “AI gaming copilots.” They’re not what most of us want, but they’re what’s possible today with relatively low R&D lift.

Here’s to a better next year.

LIVE 13 seconds ago

CES 2025, the annual consumer tech conference held in Las Vegas, is upon us — and this is where you…

Fish AI Reader

Fish AI Reader

AI辅助创作,多种专业模板,深度分析,高质量内容生成。从观点提取到深度思考,FishAI为您提供全方位的创作支持。新版本引入自定义参数,让您的创作更加个性化和精准。

FishAI

FishAI

鱼阅,AI 时代的下一个智能信息助手,助你摆脱信息焦虑

联系邮箱 441953276@qq.com

相关标签

CES 2025 人工智能 AI产品 技术炒作 实用性
相关文章