
AI that thinks ahead
Vladimir Vasilev
August 13, 2025
Artificial intelligence (AI) has been around for decades, but it was the rise of generative AI that has catapulted it into the public spotlight.
Driving this revolution are large language models (LLMs) – systems that have redefined how machines understand and generate human language.
Today, the AI landscape is home to multiple LLMs, each trained on vast datasets, earning them the name “large”.
As we look to 2025 and beyond, the question is no longer if these models will advance, but how they will evolve and what new possibilities they will unlock.
From natural conversations to intelligent workflows, Vladimir Vasilev, digital lead at Baker Tilly (Dominican Republic), explores four major developments poised to change everything.
Imagine an AI assistant that can listen to your voice, analyse a photo you upload and respond with a custom-generated video – all within a single conversation.
Well, that may be closer than you think.
Tomorrow’s AI won’t be limited to words. Multimodal models are being built to understand and generate audio, images and even video within a single system.
This evolution will make AI interactions feel far more natural and human-like.
Most AI tools today are built for one-off tasks. Agentic AI, however, is a huge leap forward.
These systems are designed to manage entire workflows over time – acting like intelligent assistants that can plan, execute and adapt as they go.
Think AI that doesn’t just draft a single email, but manages your calendar, writes reports, books appointments, and follows up on emails over hours, days or even weeks.
Recent breakthroughs show AI can now directly operate software interfaces – clicking buttons, navigating menus and completing tasks in apps.
This could redefine automation, moving beyond the rigid rules of robotic process automation to create flexible, learning-based agents.
Imagine an AI that sorts your email, responds in your tone of voice, fills out online forms and learns your preferences.
Instead of scripted steps, it would simply observe, act and adapt, becoming an intelligent layer across all your tools.
The next leap in AI could come from models that don’t just read about the world – they experience it.
So-called “world models” simulate environments where AI agents learn by exploring, much like humans do.
These virtual worlds offer a powerful new way to train AI – not just to mimic language but to understand and interact with complex systems.
As we move beyond static datasets, world models open the door to AI that learns continuously through experience.
New opportunities
These emerging technologies – multimodal AI, agentic systems, embodied software agents and experiential world models – mark a shift towards AI that can act, learn and reason in more human-like ways.
As they evolve in the coming years, they’ll unlock new opportunities in how we work, create and connect.
The future of AI isn’t just about smarter tools – it’s about true partners in solving real-world challenges.
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