Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What about something like speech therapy?
Or how about teaching?
Online courses have been a thing for a while. Professors/teachers will DEFINITELY be replaced by AI and laptops.
Teaching is definitely safe. Some aspects may change (like more online instruction), but I’d love to see an AI program actually manage a classroom.
How’s AI going to get 30 teenagers to sit down at a computer to work? How’s AI going to keep 25 elementary school kids in a classroom?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nurse
LOL, wrong. I'm a nurse and you can bet that AI is happening in nursing
Yet you give no examples of how AI is replacing nurses...
AI might supplement what a nurse does but it won't replace a nurse.
Obviously.
This is what most people here don't seem to understand. Machinery didn't replace slavery/sharecroppers, it just made it where fewer were needed for any given situation.
So while A.I. won't completely replace most fields, it WILL replace about 95% of the jobs in an average field that will benefit from the A.I. and robotics.
A current example are fast food places replacing someone at a register, with a robot kiosk. There will still be a manager to attend to kiosk/customer troubles, but now there are several less workers needed to tend the front counter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nurse
LOL, wrong. I'm a nurse and you can bet that AI is happening in nursing
Yet you give no examples of how AI is replacing nurses...
AI might supplement what a nurse does but it won't replace a nurse.
Anonymous wrote:SO I asked AI:
"Jobs least likely to be replaced by AI involve high levels of human interaction, creativity, emotional intelligence, and complex physical tasks in unpredictable environments. These include:
Healthcare professionals (e.g., doctors, nurses, therapists): Require empathy, nuanced judgment, and hands-on care.
Teachers and educators: Demand personal connection, motivation, and adapting to individual student needs.
Creative artists (e.g., writers, musicians, designers): Rely on unique human expression and originality.
Skilled trades (e.g., plumbers, electricians, carpenters): Involve complex, context-specific tasks in varied settings.
Social workers and counselors: Depend on deep emotional understanding and trust-building.
Strategic leaders (e.g., CEOs, policymakers): Need vision, ethical judgment, and high-stakes decision-making.
Research scientists: Require innovative thinking and hypothesis-driven experimentation.
While AI can augment these roles (e.g., diagnostic tools in healthcare or automation in trades), full replacement is unlikely due to the human-centric or unpredictable nature of the work. Jobs with repetitive, data-driven tasks (e.g., basic data entry, routine customer service) face higher risk of automation."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nurse
LOL, wrong. I'm a nurse and you can bet that AI is happening in nursing
Anonymous wrote:Robot have mastered many human motor skills.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 9th grader is leaning towards a field within law enforcement.
Won’t replace but robot dogs, etc will be used for patrols even more heavily than now.
As long as they don't unveil a real life ED209!![]()
I’m not worried about ED209. My house has stairs.
Good one! But you have to come downstairs eventually.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 9th grader is leaning towards a field within law enforcement.
Won’t replace but robot dogs, etc will be used for patrols even more heavily than now.
As long as they don't unveil a real life ED209!![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What about something like speech therapy?
Or how about teaching?
Online courses have been a thing for a while. Professors/teachers will DEFINITELY be replaced by AI and laptops.
Teaching is definitely safe. Some aspects may change (like more online instruction), but I’d love to see an AI program actually manage a classroom.
How’s AI going to get 30 teenagers to sit down at a computer to work? How’s AI going to keep 25 elementary school kids in a classroom?
Anonymous wrote:Well, I don't think anyone will have AI represent them in court.
I wouldn't want AI to be a building inspector.
And this idea of AI performing surgery - who would agree to that? What medically licensed entity will take on the liability?
Now if AI can do my dishes and fold my laundry, I'd be very impressed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What about the trades? Plumbing, HVAC, etc.
OP’s kid’s mind is too good for those.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nurse
LOL, wrong. I'm a nurse and you can bet that AI is happening in nursing