I bought one of these a few years ago to get rid of mice in the roof cavity of a house.
They lure mice with something like peanut butter and then hammer them with compressed CO2. It has a phone app to let you know how it's going and can connect to the net to log mice kills possibly to New Zealand. I found it was not as effective as an old time spring loaded mouse trap (with cheese).
In this particular case what ended all mice in the roof cavity was installing 'gutter guard' around all roof gutters. That stopped every mouse from entering the roof.
I'm turning into a bit of an inventor in my 70's. I just discovered a technique to get a 'throwline' over high tree branches. There are plenty of ways arborists do this and I do it to fell dead eucalyptus trees with a work truck.
I was spinning a weight on a light rope and releasing it but it was not a good method. I realized that if I spun in the opposite direction it would form an arc that landed the line above the branch.
I don't know if AI can solve real world problems at all. That 'X' guy recons all human knowledge has been sampled but the people designing AI don't live in the real world. If they did they would have realized AI can be by-passed easily.