Google CEO Sundar Pichai.Justin Sullivan/GettyGoogle's AI Studio leader thinks a "straight shot" to superintelligence is looking more probable.Logan Kilpatrick said on X that this was because of the success of scaling test-time compute.He says he believes that AGI will still happen but that it'll be more like a "product release."One of Google's top product leaders believes a new approach to AI could offer a "straight shot" to artificial superintelligence, which promises abilities far more advanced than humans in all areas.Logan Kilpatrick, the product manager for Google's AI Studio, said on X on Monday that he believed that aiming straight for artificial superintelligence, or ASI, without focusing on intermediate milestones was "looking more and more probable by the month."He added that the success so far of scaling up test-time compute — the moment when an AI model must perform a task or answer a question — was a "good indication" that a direct path to ASI may be possible.A lot of conversation has focused on when or how artificial general intelligence, in which a model matches or surpasses humans in a broad range of tasks, will be reached.