Yes great question. Looking at programming in general, there seem to be many obvious counterexamples, where computers have certain capabilities (‘features’) that humans don’t (e.g. doing millions of arithmetic operations extremely fast with zero clumsy errors) and likewise where they have certain problem (‘bugs’) that we don’t (e.g. adversarial examples for image classifiers, which don’t trip humans up at all but entire ruin the neural nets classification.)
Yes great question. Looking at programming in general, there seem to be many obvious counterexamples, where computers have certain capabilities (‘features’) that humans don’t (e.g. doing millions of arithmetic operations extremely fast with zero clumsy errors) and likewise where they have certain problem (‘bugs’) that we don’t (e.g. adversarial examples for image classifiers, which don’t trip humans up at all but entire ruin the neural nets classification.)