- Google co -founder Sergey Brin says that workers should consider 60 hours weeks
- That is above the impulse they are to obtain from Gemini ai
- Powerful artificial general intelligence is the next step
After moving away from the company in 2019, Google’s co -founder, Sergey Brin, recently returned to the technological giant to work in person and is now asking all workers to consider doing the same.
Brin believes that, with the correct resources, the company can win the AI career, but that means that workers are being urged not only to return to the office, but to consider doing more than 60 hours of 60 hours (which works like 12 hours a day for five days).
The big question comes as Bein sees Google as a great position for an advance in artificial general intelligence.
Google’s co -founder wants workers to spend hours
Brin is not the only leader who suggests that the longest working hours could be beneficial: the CEO of Infosys, Narayana Murthy, said that the company’s workers should consider renouncing 70 hours a week (14 hours a day) to help increase productivity and get poverty to India.
Although Google’s co -founder believes that the longest hours could be the response that the company has been looking for, he also indicated that employees should use Gemini and other AI tools when possible to improve efficiency, which means that workers’ results could far exceed the 60 physical hours they want to put. He also praised the company’s workers and celebrated his strong programmers and scientific data.
Although many of Google’s rivals have begun to implement full -time office work policies, Google still operates in a hybrid policy of three days per week. It is not clear if Google will follow its example, but it is unlikely that the 60 -hour Brin week reaches the implementation level. Even so, its influence as a founder could bring some weight.
Despite the turbulent and slightly problematic launch of Bard in 2023, Google has increased its AI efforts, and the change of gemini brand potentially seeks to distance the artificial intelligence of the company of previous versions.
However, Google, and/or its rivals, will comply with artificial general intelligence, where capacities can overcome human intelligence, it is not yet determined, but with the OpenAi CEO, Sam Altman, who also strives for AGI, technology is certainly within reach.
Through Ars Technica