A cyborg’s dreams realized

When Greg was young, he was so interested in artificial intelligence that his friends called him Cyborg. Nearly three decades later, he’s proud to say, "Haha, I told you so." Or more usefully, he’s proud to launch GHC’s Generative AI Consulting practice.

A builder’s market

We’re beyond the experimentation phase. The tools are mature, and the APIs are stable enough to build real products. Now comes the hard part - designing things that actually work. Generative AI gives us a new opportunity to rethink how people interact with computers. It might just be the input/output revolution that has been long needed.

The risks

With great promise comes real danger. Others have written beautifully about the ethical and environmental risks. GHC focuses on the system design, architecture, and operational risks. Costs are hard to predict. Timelines slip. Technologies shift faster than expected. And even the best models are non-deterministic — a huge challenge when building reliable UX.

Imagine calling a REST API like `/users/hluska` - you expect a stable, testable result. With generative AI, you might get cerulean. And that randomness? It’s what breaks production systems, not just what fuels weird headlines.

Scared yet?

You should be. But you should be more scared if your consultant isn’t. Most generative AI projects fail because people underestimate how different — and how unpredictable — these systems really are. GHC’s role is to help you move forward, eyes open.