It won't. It's going to change the way we do public sector. Not so much because the tech is revolutionary but because the upper echelons of society are sold on it and are actually putting it to use.
Technically you could do a lot of the decision making it'll be doing with human made models and a lot of data, but the machine is cheaper and it's backed by consulting agencies.
RPA was the first indication. It's basically screenscraping and small bots, stuff that's been around for a long time, I mean, it's basically what people use to bot in video games. Yet it's become a multimillion dollar industry over the course of a few years because it caught the right drift.
Like RPA, machine learning isn't just hype. It actually does some things with data really well, and when you couple that with the fact that ministers want this tech, well, that's all you need.
Technically you could do a lot of the decision making it'll be doing with human made models and a lot of data, but the machine is cheaper and it's backed by consulting agencies.
RPA was the first indication. It's basically screenscraping and small bots, stuff that's been around for a long time, I mean, it's basically what people use to bot in video games. Yet it's become a multimillion dollar industry over the course of a few years because it caught the right drift.
Like RPA, machine learning isn't just hype. It actually does some things with data really well, and when you couple that with the fact that ministers want this tech, well, that's all you need.