Here’s my understanding of the “standard story” of the timing of different AI-enabled technologies in relation to each other. I wrote out the standard story mostly for my own understanding, but I’m keen for others’ feedback as well.
1. Right now
2. ~Fully automated coder (anything that ~only involves literally writing code)
3. ~Fully automated programmer (including things like architecture, design docs, etc)
4. ~Fully automated small number of other jobs (~whichever things are on the way between programmer and AI R&D that is cheap to automate, or necessary intermediate steps)
5. Fully, or almost fully automated AI R&D (all parts of AI research, including coordination and subjective matters of research taste) – this closes the loop and fully kicks off a software-only intelligence explosion
6. Software-only intelligence explosion (not certain but reasonably likely, that increasing returns to intelligence from better software feeds back in itself)
7. Superhuman AI scientist/all R&D (at this point, AI is better at all natural and social science than any human alive)
8. Cornucopia of new technologies (easy mass surveillance, cures to cancer, novel pandemic technologies like mirror bio, other superweapons, perfect missile defense, maybe though probably not nanotech, maybe though probably not aging)[1]
9. Remote-only superintelligence (Or “superintelligent at almost all cognitive tasks.” at this point, ~anything a human could do in front of a computer that doesn’t require the idiosyncratic taste of having a human work for you[2], an AI can do better and cheaper)
10. Advanced robotics and industrial explosion
11. Full superintelligence (can do anything a human can do more cheaply than 2025 humans)
12. Dyson swarm
13. Probes start being sent to the far reaches of space at appreciable fractions of c.
To the standard story[3], I don’t have much to add personally. It’s a plausible enough story and I don’t think I have particularly contrarian opinions.