Anonymous wrote:There will be many "AI" companies that fail. CS remains the most closely associated major with AI but as its graduates are discovering that hardly guarantees employment as the sector eats itself.
https://www.cnbc.com/2026/02/26/c3-ai-stock-layoffs-loss.html
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Peter Thiel says AI is bad for the "math people" and that the "word people" will be more in demand.....
AI can generate "words" as easily as it can generate code.
Anonymous wrote:Peter Thiel says AI is bad for the "math people" and that the "word people" will be more in demand.....
Anonymous wrote:Peter Thiel says AI is bad for the "math people" and that the "word people" will be more in demand.....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:the best job in tech is a PM - and prompt engineering will be critical skill for that role going forward despite what our resident lax bro believes
prompt engineering isn't a thing anymore. companies expect all their workers to be able to "prompt" AI now.
https://www.wsj.com/articles/the-hottest-ai-job-of-2023-is-already-obsolete-1961b054?gaa_at=eafs&gaa_n=AWEtsqdq-f6k2uK9X4YLllt3Ywy4iR8lYWqxtT_Ll8NN1Ou0hgPjh4bS3Xvr&gaa_ts=699f7016&gaa_sig=MRvhis_K-ZXDtn7qZpWgWfIP-_uW0BldXqcE2s89DW7d6TvdsOAUgjZNKv_uLI5ZPjKpjminkH91oVJLk1R48w%3D%3D
Two years ago, prompt engineering was one of the buzziest jobs in tech, fetching salaries of up to $200,000 on the promise of becoming any company’s “AI Whisperer.”
Now, the role is basically obsolete thanks to the breakneck speed of AI development and companies’ own maturity in terms of understanding how to use the technology.
The concept of prompt engineers was to have an expert crafting the exact right inputs to generate the best responses out of large language models. But today, AI models are much better at intuiting user intent and they can ask follow-up questions when they’re unclear on it.
Also, [b]companies say they are training a wide range of employees across functions on how best to prompt and use models, so there’s not much of a need for a single person to hold this expertise.[/b]
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't major in AI. Don't chase trends. Only if truly interested in cs
Well tech bros tell everyone the only jobs left are the ones using AI.
Anonymous wrote:the best job in tech is a PM - and prompt engineering will be critical skill for that role going forward despite what our resident lax bro believes
Two years ago, prompt engineering was one of the buzziest jobs in tech, fetching salaries of up to $200,000 on the promise of becoming any company’s “AI Whisperer.”
Now, the role is basically obsolete thanks to the breakneck speed of AI development and companies’ own maturity in terms of understanding how to use the technology.
The concept of prompt engineers was to have an expert crafting the exact right inputs to generate the best responses out of large language models. But today, AI models are much better at intuiting user intent and they can ask follow-up questions when they’re unclear on it.
Also, companies say they are training a wide range of employees across functions on how best to prompt and use models, so there’s not much of a need for a single person to hold this expertise.
Anonymous wrote:Don't major in AI. Don't chase trends. Only if truly interested in cs