Opinion

AI Still Needs Our Common Sense, Says Tech Boss

WNWNIAI Newsroom 1 min read(updated 13 June 2026)
Reviewed by the WNIAI Newsroom · Independent Australian AI coverage
AI Still Needs Our Common Sense, Says Tech Boss
Image: Windows Central

Even with all the chatter about artificial intelligence, there's a vital point often overlooked: AI is a powerful tool, but it's not a replacement for human wisdom. That's the message from Lisa Su, the boss of major computer chip maker AMD. She's saying that while AI can crunch numbers and spot patterns incredibly fast, it can't decide what problems are actually worth tackling in the first place.

Think of it like this: your smartphone has a calculator that can do complex sums in a flash. But it can't tell you *if* you should be budgeting for a holiday or investing in a new oven for your bakery. That takes your judgment, your experience, and your understanding of your own life or business.

Ms. Su's point is reassuring. It means that while AI might learn to write an email or analyse a spreadsheet, it still relies on us — the people — to set its goals. It needs us to tell it what's important, what aligns with our values, and what genuinely serves our needs or our customers. It's a reminder that our unique human insight is still incredibly valuable, maybe even more so, as AI becomes more common.

For Australian small business owners, this insight is key. AI tools can help with repetitive tasks, saving you time and effort. But the big decisions – the ones that shape your business, your relationships with staff, and your customer service – those remain firmly in your hands. AI can be a brilliant assistant, but you're still the boss, the one with the vision and the common sense to guide it.

Why it matters

This means that while AI can help streamline your work or make life easier, your unique human ability to decide what truly matters still sits at the top. For small business owners, it's a reminder that you're still in charge of the important decisions, using AI as a helper, not a decision-maker.

#ai ethics#human role in ai#business strategy#ai for business#ai limitations#australian business#tech leaders
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