Who Needs Programming? New Way!!!
Robocoders: Using no-code AI platform — an automated programming tool
that either generates new code or customizes pre-existing code according to
user input — generally requires access to a web browser and training data. From
there, a user-friendly interface lets users train a prebuilt
architecture.
· Teachable Machine from Google
(pictured above) and Lobe from
Microsoft make building vision models a point-and-click process. Users supply
training images.
· Power Platform and AI Builder, both from
Microsoft, are aimed at business users who want to process text in documents
and images.
· Juji enables users
to build chatbots by choosing from a list of topics and question-and-answer
pairs.
· Akkio helps users
build models that predict business outcomes from spreadsheets. For instance,
Ellipsis, a marketing company, uploaded a spreadsheet of keywords, blog titles,
and click rates to train a model that
predicts which words and phrases rank highly in Google search results.
· Amazon
Sagemaker offers Canvas, which
is designed to help business analysts derive insights from data.
· eBay deployed proprietary
low-code and no-code AI tools internally, enabling nontechnical
employees in areas like marketing to roll their own models.
Behind the news: Similar tools for building non-AI applications
like websites (Wordpress), ecommerce stores (Shopify), and video games (RPG
Maker) undergird a significant portion of the online economy. OpenAI and DeepMind offer natural
language tools that write code using plain-English prompts. Source AI, available in a
beta-test version, extends such auto-coding functionality to French, German,
and Spanish to generate programs in at least 40 languages.
Why it matters: Platforms that automate coding, data
collection, and training are an important part of AI’s future. Although
no-code AI tools are still maturing — for example, they’re limited to
particular tasks and some aren’t yet suitable for commercial-grade applications
— they’re on track to open the field to a far broader range of users, enabling
them to apply tried-and-true approaches to certain classes of problems. And
they may be useful to experienced AI developers, too. For instance,
trained engineers may also use them to build wireframe versions of more
intensive projects.
We’re thinking: No-code tools have a long way to go, and even
when they get there, education in AI technology will be necessary to
handle difficult problems, high-stakes situations, and cutting-edge
developments. Skilled engineers will exceed the capabilities available at the
press of a button for the foreseeable future.
Comments
Post a Comment