I'm thinking about those ideas since years. For me it is strange that it seems for many such a hard concept to grasp, since the advantages are huge and obvious.
Today some tasks like mass renaming of files of a certain type require an extra tool for a casual users, which is in most cases not available and the task therefor not doable. This is a pity and wastes a lot of potential/productivity.
If programs where things you could easily talk to - and I don't mean by using a programming language - then filtering and renaming some files should be easy.
This kind of mechanism would also allow to blur the line between the traditional desktop, the cloud and AI (something that has been tried before, but failed because the use-case where not compelling). For example, if Microsoft would update Windows in such a way, every user could have some cloud points for AI image recognition per month. If for some reason you needed to do a lot of image recognition, you would have to pay extra. Which would be okay, since using "more resources" creates costs somewhere and we as society agree that someone has to pay for it -> capitalism. This blending of ecosystems and capabilities is where things should be going, but strangely none of the big tech companies seem to pursuer such a path.
Today some tasks like mass renaming of files of a certain type require an extra tool for a casual users, which is in most cases not available and the task therefor not doable. This is a pity and wastes a lot of potential/productivity.
If programs where things you could easily talk to - and I don't mean by using a programming language - then filtering and renaming some files should be easy.
This kind of mechanism would also allow to blur the line between the traditional desktop, the cloud and AI (something that has been tried before, but failed because the use-case where not compelling). For example, if Microsoft would update Windows in such a way, every user could have some cloud points for AI image recognition per month. If for some reason you needed to do a lot of image recognition, you would have to pay extra. Which would be okay, since using "more resources" creates costs somewhere and we as society agree that someone has to pay for it -> capitalism. This blending of ecosystems and capabilities is where things should be going, but strangely none of the big tech companies seem to pursuer such a path.