We have all been there. You ask ChatGPT to write an email for you. It does a great job. But then, you still have to copy the text, open your email app, paste it in, add the subject line, and hit send. It’s helpful, but it doesn’t actually finish the job. This is exactly where the future of tech is heading. We are moving away from AI that just chats with us to AI that actually does things for us. This new wave is called Agentic AI . The Best Way to Understand It: Intern vs. Executive Assistant Current AI (Generative): It acts like a junior intern. You say, “Write a response to this client.” They hand you a draft on a piece of paper. You still have to mail it. Agentic AI: It acts like an executive assistant. You say, “Handle this client.” They write the email, cross-check your calendar, send the calendar invite, and automatically follow up a week later. How Does It Actually Work? (The “See, Think, Do” Loop) Agentic AI doesn’t just predict the next word in a sentence; it solves problems using a simple loop: See: It takes your request (e.g., “Plan an anniversary dinner”). Think: It breaks the job down. It knows it needs to find a restaurant, check open times, look at your calendar, and make a reservation. Do: It actually connects to the web. If the restaurant is fully booked, a standard chatbot says, “Sorry, I can’t help.” An Agentic AI thinks, “Okay, that failed. Let me check the next best Italian place nearby,” and tries again until it succeeds. What This Looks Like in Real Life The Ultimate Travel Agent: Your flight gets cancelled while you are mid-air. An AI agent notices the delay, scans all other airlines, books you on a new connecting flight, and updates your hotel check-in time before you even land. Smart Shopping: Instead of reading 100 reviews, you say, “Find the best pet-hair vacuum under $300.” It reads the reviews, compares prices, and puts the best one in your cart for your approval. Teams of AI: Soon, we won’t just have one agent. You might have a “Manager Agent” that delegates tasks to a “Designer Agent” and a “Coder Agent” to build a website for you overnight. The Catch: The “100 Pizza” Problem Giving an AI the power to click buttons is risky. If it misinterprets a prompt and accidentally orders 100 pizzas instead of 1, that’s a huge problem. Because of security risks and hallucinations, the near future will rely heavily on a “Human in the Loop” system. The AI will do 99% of the heavy lifting, but it will ask for your final click of permission before spending your money or sending an important message. TL;DR: We are shifting from AI that requires our constant attention to AI that runs in the background, executing multi-step tasks and solving problems before we even ask. It’s the difference between having a tool in your hand and a partner by your side. What do you guys think? Are you ready to let an AI have access to your credit card and inbox to run errands for you, or is that a privacy nightmare waiting to happen? Let’s discuss. submitted by /u/Hot-Situation41
Originally posted by u/Hot-Situation41 on r/ArtificialInteligence
