Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    TRENDING :
    • The AI in Soderbergh’s Lennon documentary caused an uproar at Cannes. The filmmaker explains
    • Close the skills gap through employer-educator collaboration
    • Spirit airlines left a void. Summer travelers may struggle to find replacement budget flights
    • Why Visa sees the World Cup as a brand ‘tap in’
    • SpaceX IPO: Stock listing date nears as Elon Musk’s rocket company prepares for historic market debut
    • Nine founder red flags that are keeping VCs from investing in your AI company
    • How to balance your passion and your day job
    • More and more, these invisible hands are shaping your restaurant, hotel, event, and other purchases
    Compatriot Chronicle
    • Home
    • US Politics
    • World Politics
    • Economy
    • Business
    • Headline News
    Compatriot Chronicle
    Home»Business»What to know about tech’s newest buzzword: ‘agentic’ AI
    Business

    What to know about tech’s newest buzzword: ‘agentic’ AI

    November 18, 20255 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email Copy Link
    Follow Us
    Google News Flipboard
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    For technology adopters looking for the next big thing, “agentic AI” is the future. At least, that’s what the marketing pitches and tech industry T-shirts say.

    What makes an artificial intelligence product “agentic” depends on who’s selling it. But the promise is usually that it’s a step beyond today’s generative AI chatbots.

    Chatbots, however useful, are all talk and no action. They can answer questions, retrieve and summarize information, write papers, and generate images, music, video, and lines of code. AI agents, by contrast, are supposed to be able to take actions on a person’s behalf.

    But if you’re confused, you’re not alone. Google searches for “agentic” have skyrocketed from near obscurity a year ago to a peak earlier this fall.

    A new report Tuesday by researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Boston Consulting Group, who surveyed more than 2,000 business executives around the world, describes agentic AI as a “new class of systems” that “can plan, act, and learn on their own.”

    “They are not just tools to be operated or assistants waiting for instructions,” says the MIT Sloan Management Review report. “Increasingly, they behave like autonomous teammates, capable of executing multistep processes and adapting as they go.”

    How to know if it’s an AI agent or just a fancy chatbot

    AI chatbots — such as the original ChatGPT that debuted three years ago this month — rely on systems called large language models that predict the next word in a sentence based on the huge trove of human writings they’ve been trained on. They can sound remarkably human, especially when given a voice, but are effectively performing a kind of word completion.

    That’s different from what AI developers — including ChatGPT’s maker, OpenAI, and tech giants like Amazon, Google, IBM, Microsoft, and Salesforce — have in mind for AI agents.

    “A generative AI-based chatbot will say, ‘Here are the great ideas’ … and then be done,” said Swami Sivasubramanian, vice president of Agentic AI at Amazon Web Services, in an interview this week. “It’s useful, but what makes things agentic is that it goes beyond what a chatbot does.”

    Sivasubramanian, a longtime Amazon employee, took on his new role helping to lead work on AI agents in Amazon’s cloud computing division earlier this year. He sees great promise in AI systems that can be given a “high-level goal” and break it down into a series of steps and act upon them. “I truly believe agentic AI is going to be one of the biggest transformations since the beginning of the cloud,” he said.

    For most consumers, the first encounters with AI agents could be in realms like online shopping. Set a budget and some preferences and AI agents can buy things or arrange travel bookings using your credit card. In the longer run, the hope is that they can do more complex tasks with access to your computer and a set of guidelines to follow.

    “I’d love an agent that just looked at all my medical bills and explanations of benefits and figured out how to pay them,” or another one that worked like a “personal shield” fighting off email spam and phishing attempts, said Thomas Dietterich, a professor emeritus at Oregon State University who has worked on developing AI assistants for decades.

    Dietterich has some quibbles with certain companies using “agentic” to describe “any action a computer might do, including just looking things up on the web,” but he has no doubt that the technology has immense possibilities as AI systems are given the “freedom and responsibility” to refine goals and respond to changing conditions as they work on people’s behalf.

    “We can imagine a world in which there are thousands or millions of agents operating and they can form coalitions,” Dietterich said. “Can they form cartels? Would there be law enforcement (AI) agents?

    “Agentic” is a trendy buzzword based on an older idea

    Milind Tambe has been researching AI agents that work together for three decades, since the first International Conference on Multi-Agent Systems gathered in San Francisco in 1995. Tambe said he’s been “amused” by the sudden popularity of “agentic” as an adjective. Previously, the word describing something that has agency was mostly found in other academic fields, such as psychology or chemistry.

    But computer scientists have been debating what an agent is for as long as Tambe has been studying them.

    In the 1990s, “people agreed that some software appeared more like an agent, and some felt less like an agent, and there was not a perfect dividing line,” said Tambe, a professor at Harvard University. “Nonetheless, it seemed useful to use the word ‘agent’ to describe software or robotic entities acting autonomously in an environment, sensing the environment, reacting to it, planning, thinking.”

    The prominent AI researcher Andrew Ng, co-founder of online learning company Coursera, helped advocate for popularizing the adjective “agentic” more than a year ago to encompass a broader spectrum of AI tasks. At the time, he also appreciated that mainly “technical people” were describing it that way.

    “When I see an article that talks about ‘agentic’ workflows, I’m more likely to read it, since it’s less likely to be marketing fluff and more likely to have been written by someone who understands the technology,” Ng wrote in a June 2024 blog post.

    Ng didn’t respond to requests for comment on whether he still thinks that.

    —Matt O’Brien, AP technology writer



    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

    Related Posts

    The AI in Soderbergh’s Lennon documentary caused an uproar at Cannes. The filmmaker explains

    May 18, 2026

    Close the skills gap through employer-educator collaboration

    May 18, 2026

    Spirit airlines left a void. Summer travelers may struggle to find replacement budget flights

    May 18, 2026
    Top News

    Governments To Begin Collecting DNA At BIRTH

    By Staff WriterNovember 20, 2025

    El Salvador passed a law that requires newborns to submit their DNA to a government-wide…

    Hate your job, but can’t quit? Try this

    May 2, 2026

    Intel shares jump after report of possible US stake in company

    August 17, 2025

    AI is rewriting business in real time—and most leaders aren’t ready

    March 19, 2026
    Top Trending

    The AI in Soderbergh’s Lennon documentary caused an uproar at Cannes. The filmmaker explains

    By Staff WriterMay 18, 2026

    The day John Lennon was shot, on Dec. 8, 1980, he and…

    Close the skills gap through employer-educator collaboration

    By Staff WriterMay 18, 2026

    Higher education is under pressure from every direction. Shifts in finance and…

    Spirit airlines left a void. Summer travelers may struggle to find replacement budget flights

    By Staff WriterMay 18, 2026

    Days after Spirit Airlines shut down in the middle of the night,…

    Categories
    • Business
    • Economy
    • Headline News
    • Top News
    • US Politics
    • World Politics
    About us

    The Populist Bulletin serves as a beacon for the populist movement, which champions the interests of ordinary citizens over the agendas of the powerful and entrenched elitists. Rooted in the belief that the voices of everyday workers, families, and communities are often drowned out by powerful people and institutions, it delivers straightforward, unfiltered, compelling, relatable stories that resonate with the values of the American public.

    The Populist Bulletin was founded with a fervent commitment to inform, inspire, empower and spark meaningful conversations about the economy, business, politics, inequality, government accountability and overreach, globalization, and the preservation of American cultural heritage.

    The site offers a dynamic mix of investigative journalism, opinion editorials, and viral content that amplify populist sentiments and deliver stories that echo the concerns of everyday Americans while boldly challenging mainstream narratives that serve the privileged few.

    Top Picks

    The AI in Soderbergh’s Lennon documentary caused an uproar at Cannes. The filmmaker explains

    May 18, 2026

    Close the skills gap through employer-educator collaboration

    May 18, 2026

    Spirit airlines left a void. Summer travelers may struggle to find replacement budget flights

    May 18, 2026
    Categories
    • Business
    • Economy
    • Headline News
    • Top News
    • US Politics
    • World Politics
    Copyright © 2025 Populist Bulletin. All Rights Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.