the easy part is done but the hard part is so hard it takes years to progress
There is also no guarantee of continued progress to a breakthrough.
We have been through several "AI Winters" before where promising new technology was discovered and people in the field were convinced that the breakthrough was just around the corner and it never came.
LLMs aren't quite the same situation as they do have some undeniable utility to a wide variety of people even without AGI springing out of them, but the blind optimism that surely progress will continue at a rapid pace until the assumed breakthrough is realized feels pretty familiar to the hype cycle preceding past AI "Winters".
Yeah, remember when we spent 15 years (~2000 to ~2015) calling it “machine learning” because AI was a bad word?
We use so much AI in production every day but nobody notices because as soon as a technology becomes useful, we stop calling it AI. Then it’s suddenly “just face recognition” or “just product recommendations” or “just [plane] autopilot” or “just adaptive cruise control” etc
You know a technology isn’t practical yet because it’s still being called AI.
One of the first humanoid robots was an 18th century clockwork mechanism inside a porcelain doll that autonomously wrote out “Cogito Ergo Sum” in cursive with a pen. It was considered thought provoking at the time because it implied that some day machines could think.
BBC video posted to reddit 10 years ago: https://www.reddit.com/r/history/s/d6xTeqfKCv