I tend to have that view. It's very efficient at pattern recognition. And modelling new relations between patterns in phenomenon that might be otherwise unrelated - I think AI still has some work cut out on this front. Our brain is less efficient though, at explicit number crunching - a chimp's brain might actually be better at that task.
The other thing that it seems to be good is certain types of optimization, especially in tasks that require a great deal of local optimization. But, again, what is AI there is far from clear. People have long laboured on optimization problems---and successfully too--without considering their work to be AI. Has the field of AI come up with anything that is fundamentally new in optimization techniques? It seems that quite a bit of current AI is just the application of well-known techniques in new ways. Artificial? Yes, in that it is not a creation of nature. Intelligent? Yes; good applications seem to require some intelligence. But is that it?
I was just reflecting on much-touted ideas such as that AI would prove itself once, say, a computer could beat a grandmaster at chess. Now, a chess grandmaster can see only up to 25-30 moves ahead, at the very best, and chess at that level is a timed game. So any computer that is fast enough ought to be able to beat a grand master by simply running through the tree of possible moves, one at a time; to the extent that there have been specialized computers that did a good job at the task, straightforward tree-pruning might have helped, but the key was in the fact specialization meant speed. A surprising number of AI "successes" seem to to be of that just-a-matter-of-technological-time flavor.
It is certainly possible that the human brain is not very good at explicit number crunching, but perhaps one could still model it as though it were.
I believe that True AI is coming and that it will be based primarily on a very good model, combined with really fast computing and serious storage capacity; that's what we don't have right now. In fact, True AI will prove, once and for all, that there is nothing special abut the
Homo Sapiens brain. Actually, more than that: True AI will allow us to replace said brain ---or at least its use---with much,much better products.