It's also been overestimated tons of times. Look at some of the predictions from the past. It's been a complete crap-shoot. Many things have changed significantly less than people have predicted, or in significantly different ways, or significantly more.
Just because things are accelerating great pace right now doesn't really mean anything for the future. Look at the predictions people made during the "space age" 1950s and 60s. A well-known example would be 2001 (the film and novel). Yes, it's "just" some fiction, but it was also a serious attempt at predicting what the future would roughly look like, and Arthur C. Clarke wasn't some dumb yahoo either.
The year 2001 is more than 20 years in the past, and obviously we're nowhere near the world of 2001, for various reasons. Other examples include things like the Von Braun wheel, predictions from serious scientists that we'd have a moon colony by the 1990s, etc. etc. There were tons of predictions and almost none of them have come true.
They all assumed that the rate of progress would continue as it had, but it didn't, for technical, economical, and pragmatic reasons. What's the point of establishing an expensive moon colony when we've got a perfectly functional planet right here? Air is nice (in spite of what Spongebob says). Plants are nice. Water is nice. Non-cramped space to live in is nice. A magnetosphere to protect us from radiation is nice. We kind of need these things to survive and none are present on the moon.
Even when people are right they're wrong. See "Arthur C Clarke predicts the internet in 1964"[1]. He did accurately predict the internet; "a man could conduct his business just as well from Bali as London" pretty much predicts all the "digital nomads" in Bali today, right?
But he also predicts that the city will be obsolete and "seizes to make any sense". Clearly that part hasn't come true, and likely never will. Can't "remotely" get a haircut, or get a pint with friends, or all sorts of other things. And where are all those remote workers in Bali? In the Denpasar/Kuta/Canggu area. That is: a city.
It's half right and half wrong.
The take-away is that predicting the future is hard, and that anyone who claims to predicts the future with great certainty is a bullshitter, idiot, or both.
I think this is the big difference between what you're describing and AI. AI already exists, unlike a moon colony, so we're talking about pushing something forward vs. creating brand new things. It's also pretty well established that it's got tremendous economic value, which means that in our capitalist society, it's going to have a lot of resources directed at it. Not necessarily the case for a moon colony whose economic value is speculative and much longer term.
That was really my point: you can't really predict what the future will bring based on what we can do today. People were extrapolating from "we've got fancy rockets and space satellites" to "moon base" in the past, and now they're extrapolating from "GPT-4" to "GPT-5 will replace $thing soon" and even "major step towards AGI". I don't think you can make that assumption.
I'm also somewhat skeptical on the economic value, but that's a long argument I don't have time to expand on right now, and this margin is too narrow to contain it.