Anonymous wrote:We thought the internet would mean we'd work 3-4 hour days and lots of jobs would go away.
Point is there are always jobs that emerge due to technological advances that we can't conceive of in advance. A broad, liberal arts education usually means someone has the skills to adapt. Some of the more "vocational," job-specific majors might have an issue.
Anonymous wrote:Teachers
Anonymous wrote:I read that robotics AI is only like 2 years behind regular AI. So then, even plumbers etc wont need to be people.
Anonymous wrote:lol. What do these people Think an historian does? Look up and report facts? It’s already so rare to do any history-related job. More so they know how to think— historians interpret events, write books and do other general knowledge-worker jobs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Choreogrophers?!? How on earth are they projecting the 5 year growth for that? lol
Looks like we will all be dancing...
Yeah I thought that list was idiotic. Landscape architect is actually great for AI. Unless you’re having something really unique done, it’s basically just compiling info about sizes, sun exposure, temp zone, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Choreogrophers?!? How on earth are they projecting the 5 year growth for that? lol
Looks like we will all be dancing...
Anonymous wrote:All the more reason to go to the best college, make the most connections, find a partner who has no student loans (they’re at the top colleges that meet full needs)
Or learn a trade.
Anonymous wrote:The AI bubble is real and really big.
When it pops, market will go down 20%.