Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree that working directly with humans is more AI proof than other jobs.
Supporting that work, or directly working as a coach, physical therapist, doctor, carer, educator of young children.
Even if areas like education go through massive change, the youngest children will still need human comfort. That and aging populations.
Education will still need a lot of in person teachers.
Even if knowledge is imparted by robots, we still need humans to teach and model real life situations. And we need to think really hard about whether we want kids growing up so dependent on technology and can’t do simple things like measure, make change, or read a map.
They need to interact with other people and physical objects and learn citizenship, how to interact with others, practical skills like cooking, cleaning, and budgeting. And physical education, music, and art of course.
See Japanese elementary schools as a model.
A lot of classroom teaching today is one person giving the same lesson to 25 or 30 kids, then collecting papers and grading. Honestly, some of that work may be better done by AI anyway, especially grading, feedback, practice questions, and customized study plans.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:AI will be transformational, but not in the way people expect. Instead, it will cause an economic crash when AI never generates the promised revenues because it can't fully replace humans for most jobs. Data centers will have been built but will be unneeded, and massive capital will have been wasted. Big tech, hedge funds, and banks will suffer huge losses from pouring too much money into AI.
I am a senior statistician and AI has been phenomenal for me. We spent about a year testing AI in many of our processes and it works. Many people are in denial and I will not speak about fields I have no idea about. Hower as far as my role is concerned at our company, AI works. We are down to just 3 people in the Analytics team. I am running models that use to take me weeks with constantly begging some our engineers for help.
But some people are saying their job is safe from AI and my answer is good for them. They know their job more than I (we) do. I am just honest with myself. I am 100% replaceable by AI. Knowing this helps.
Here is one tip. If you are a domain expert and know how to use AI to augment your work, you will be valuable.
People underestimate how much Billionaires hate workers. You honestly think someone promising them a tool that can get rid of workers won't make them empty their bank accounts to make it happen?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:AI will be transformational, but not in the way people expect. Instead, it will cause an economic crash when AI never generates the promised revenues because it can't fully replace humans for most jobs. Data centers will have been built but will be unneeded, and massive capital will have been wasted. Big tech, hedge funds, and banks will suffer huge losses from pouring too much money into AI.
I sure hope so.
Anonymous wrote:AI will be transformational, but not in the way people expect. Instead, it will cause an economic crash when AI never generates the promised revenues because it can't fully replace humans for most jobs. Data centers will have been built but will be unneeded, and massive capital will have been wasted. Big tech, hedge funds, and banks will suffer huge losses from pouring too much money into AI.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree that working directly with humans is more AI proof than other jobs.
Supporting that work, or directly working as a coach, physical therapist, doctor, carer, educator of young children.
Even if areas like education go through massive change, the youngest children will still need human comfort. That and aging populations.
Education will still need a lot of in person teachers.
Even if knowledge is imparted by robots, we still need humans to teach and model real life situations. And we need to think really hard about whether we want kids growing up so dependent on technology and can’t do simple things like measure, make change, or read a map.
They need to interact with other people and physical objects and learn citizenship, how to interact with others, practical skills like cooking, cleaning, and budgeting. And physical education, music, and art of course.
See Japanese elementary schools as a model.
Anonymous wrote:AI will be transformational, but not in the way people expect. Instead, it will cause an economic crash when AI never generates the promised revenues because it can't fully replace humans for most jobs. Data centers will have been built but will be unneeded, and massive capital will have been wasted. Big tech, hedge funds, and banks will suffer huge losses from pouring too much money into AI.
Anonymous wrote:oAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:AI will be transformational, but not in the way people expect. Instead, it will cause an economic crash when AI never generates the promised revenues because it can't fully replace humans for most jobs. Data centers will have been built but will be unneeded, and massive capital will have been wasted. Big tech, hedge funds, and banks will suffer huge losses from pouring too much money into AI.
I thought I read it was already starting to turn profitable? I personally hope you are right but I also don't think AI needs to be able to do everything in order to be hugely disruptive.
They are spreading rumors of profits leading up to IPO.
Anonymous wrote:I agree that working directly with humans is more AI proof than other jobs.
Supporting that work, or directly working as a coach, physical therapist, doctor, carer, educator of young children.
Even if areas like education go through massive change, the youngest children will still need human comfort. That and aging populations.
Anonymous wrote:AI will be transformational, but not in the way people expect. Instead, it will cause an economic crash when AI never generates the promised revenues because it can't fully replace humans for most jobs. Data centers will have been built but will be unneeded, and massive capital will have been wasted. Big tech, hedge funds, and banks will suffer huge losses from pouring too much money into AI.
oAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:AI will be transformational, but not in the way people expect. Instead, it will cause an economic crash when AI never generates the promised revenues because it can't fully replace humans for most jobs. Data centers will have been built but will be unneeded, and massive capital will have been wasted. Big tech, hedge funds, and banks will suffer huge losses from pouring too much money into AI.
I thought I read it was already starting to turn profitable? I personally hope you are right but I also don't think AI needs to be able to do everything in order to be hugely disruptive.
Anonymous wrote:AI will be transformational, but not in the way people expect. Instead, it will cause an economic crash when AI never generates the promised revenues because it can't fully replace humans for most jobs. Data centers will have been built but will be unneeded, and massive capital will have been wasted. Big tech, hedge funds, and banks will suffer huge losses from pouring too much money into AI.
Anonymous wrote:AI will be transformational, but not in the way people expect. Instead, it will cause an economic crash when AI never generates the promised revenues because it can't fully replace humans for most jobs. Data centers will have been built but will be unneeded, and massive capital will have been wasted. Big tech, hedge funds, and banks will suffer huge losses from pouring too much money into AI.