Close Menu
  • Home
  • AI
  • Education
  • Entertainment
  • Food Health
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Tech
  • Well Being

Subscribe to Updates

Subscribe to our newsletter and never miss our latest news

Subscribe my Newsletter for New Posts & tips Let's stay updated!

What's Hot

She wrote vegan cookbooks. Then she started craving burgers.

February 24, 2026

OpenAI Salaries: How Much AI Researchers, Engineers Got Paid in 2025

February 24, 2026

Anthropic Exec Says AI Tools Boost, Not Replace, Software Products

February 24, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Advertise With Us
  • Contact us
  • DMCA
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
IQ Times Media – Smart News for a Smarter YouIQ Times Media – Smart News for a Smarter You
  • Home
  • AI
  • Education
  • Entertainment
  • Food Health
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Tech
  • Well Being
IQ Times Media – Smart News for a Smarter YouIQ Times Media – Smart News for a Smarter You
Home » Andrej Karpathy Say It Will Take a Decade for Agents to Actually Work
Tech

Andrej Karpathy Say It Will Take a Decade for Agents to Actually Work

IQ TIMES MEDIABy IQ TIMES MEDIAOctober 19, 2025No Comments3 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


Even in the fast-moving world of AI, patience is still a virtue, according to Andrej Karpathy.

The OpenAI cofounder, and de facto leader of the vibe-coding boom, appeared on the Dwarkesh Podcast last week to talk about how far we are from developing functional AI agents.

TL;DR — he’s not that impressed.

“They just don’t work. They don’t have enough intelligence, they’re not multimodal enough, they can’t do computer use and all this stuff,” he said. “They don’t have continual learning. You can’t just tell them something and they’ll remember it. They’re cognitively lacking and it’s just not working.”

“It will take about a decade to work through all of those issues,” he added.

Agents are among the most talked-about innovations in AI, with many investors dubbing 2025 “the year of the agent.” While definitions vary, agents are virtual assistants capable of completing tasks autonomously — breaking down problems, outlining plans, and taking action without user prompts.

Karpathy is a famously fast talker. So he wrote a follow-up post on X for listeners who couldn’t quite parse everything he said. On the topic of agents, he reiterated his earlier frustrations.

“My critique of the industry is more in overshooting the tooling w.r.t. present capability,” he wrote. “The industry lives in a future where fully autonomous entities collaborate in parallel to write all the code and humans are useless.”

He doesn’t want to live there.

In Karpathy’s ideal future, humans and AI collaborate to code and execute tasks.

Related stories

Business Insider tells the innovative stories you want to know

Business Insider tells the innovative stories you want to know

“I want it to pull the API docs and show me that it used things correctly. I want it to make fewer assumptions and ask/collaborate with me when not sure about something. I want to learn along the way and become better as a programmer, not just get served mountains of code that I’m told works,” he wrote.

The con of building the kind of agents that render humans useless, he said, is that humans are then useless, and AI “slop,” the low-quality content generated by AI, becomes ubiquitous.

Karpathy isn’t the only one to raise concerns about the functionality of AI agents.

In a post on LinkedIn last year, ScaleAI growth lead Quintin Au talked about how the errors agents make are compounded with every additional task they take on.

“Currently, every time an AI performs an action, there’s roughly a 20% chance of error (this is how LLMs work, we can’t expect 100% accuracy),” he wrote in a post on LinkedIn. “If an agent needs to complete 5 actions to finish a task, there’s only a 32% chance it gets every step right.”

While skeptical of the current state of AI agents, Karpathy said he isn’t an AI skeptic.

“My AI timelines are about 5-10X pessimistic w.r.t. what you’ll find in your neighborhood SF AI house party or on your twitter timeline, but still quite optimistic w.r.t. a rising tide of AI deniers and skeptics,” he said.



Source link

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
IQ TIMES MEDIA
  • Website

Related Posts

Anthropic Exec Says AI Tools Boost, Not Replace, Software Products

February 24, 2026

OpenAI Salaries: How Much AI Researchers, Engineers Got Paid in 2025

February 24, 2026

Anthropic Says DeepSeek Fraudulently Used Claude

February 23, 2026
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Editors Picks

Education Department sheds more programs as Trump pursues its dismantling

February 23, 2026

Family suing Kamehameha Schools over admissions policy are getting threats, seek anonymity

February 23, 2026

Mother of accused Georgia school shooter says she asked boy’s father to lock up guns

February 23, 2026

Why adults in midlife and beyond are filling college courses

February 22, 2026
Education

Education Department sheds more programs as Trump pursues its dismantling

By IQ TIMES MEDIAFebruary 23, 20260

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Education Department is handing over more of its programs and grants…

Family suing Kamehameha Schools over admissions policy are getting threats, seek anonymity

February 23, 2026

Mother of accused Georgia school shooter says she asked boy’s father to lock up guns

February 23, 2026

Why adults in midlife and beyond are filling college courses

February 22, 2026
IQ Times Media – Smart News for a Smarter You
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo YouTube
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Advertise With Us
  • Contact us
  • DMCA
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
© 2026 iqtimes. Designed by iqtimes.

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