AI is just machine, and machine is being program to get easy doing something, and machine is always have something problem soon or later. That's my thought.
any way, good to read your article.
I really enjoyed this article and your take on AI. Easy follow. Thank you!
Great article! I really enjoyed your perspective on AI and how it is likely to impact the workplace in the coming years. I agree with you that AI is not going to replace all human jobs, but it will certainly automate many tasks that are currently done by humans. This will lead to some job displacement, but it will also create new opportunities for people to work in different ways.
I think it is important to start thinking about how we can best prepare for the future of work, where AI will play a much larger role. This means developing new skills and adapting to new technologies. It also means being open to new ways of working and new ways of thinking about the workplace.
Thanks for sharing your insights!
Before the invention of alarm clocks, we had people who used to go door-to-door to wake up people. They were called knocker-uppers.
We don’t have that kind of job anymore.
But we do have a lot of new jobs that were unimaginable a few decades ago. Who thought podcaster or YouTuber would be a full time job.
Certain parts of programmer's jobs will be automated away. But that’s the case with better IDEs, open source libraries, boiler plate templates. You still need a programmer to put things together.
And jobs will always need new skills. Not sure whether prompt engineer would be a job in the future, but everyone will need prompt engineering skills.
DALL-E 3 aims to remove the need for prompt engineers for creating images.
So there will always be innovation happening and the only thing that is constant is change.
I agree that universal libraries by themselves are insufficient without proper curation and filtering of content. Training AI on data that has been carefully fact-checked and made more truthful could be one step towards improving information access. However, this is just one part of the solution. Just leaving an open ended question for everyone here: What other changes to our information ecosystems do you think are needed to surface more novel and useful insights from the data we have access to?
just to be honest i did use AWS bedrock to prompt: summarize bulletpoints
key points summarizing why AI will not change the world the way some expect:
The Internet was supposed to connect us with limitless knowledge, but most of what's online is useless or misleading. AI faces the same problem.
Universal libraries like the Library of Babel contain everything, but finding truth is like finding a needle in an endless haystack.
The Internet is a messy universal library filled with repetition, misinformation, and manipulation.
AI trained on such data just magnifies those problems. It cannot discern truth or usefulness like humans can.
Predictions that AI will replace human jobs en masse have existed for decades but never fully materialized. New jobs arise to leverage new tech.
Essential human skills like learning, problem-solving, and creativity will still be needed to make AI useful and constructive. The jobs may change, but humans will still guide AI's impact.