I've been working in the IT sector for years and with each new generation of tools it brings with it automation and less need for personnel. What once took a team of developers can now be handled by one of two programmers and with LLM it can be handled by one.
With all that being said I think the future belongs to those with hard skills s…
I've been working in the IT sector for years and with each new generation of tools it brings with it automation and less need for personnel. What once took a team of developers can now be handled by one of two programmers and with LLM it can be handled by one.
With all that being said I think the future belongs to those with hard skills such as plumbers & electricians, those who can come up with creative solutions to problems and can bring new products to market, and those who can create passive income through investing.
It's definitely going to get interesting as AI now starts culling the employment of the white collar workers.
Good points WC. The machine is now coming for those in white collars who thought they were indispensable and who celebrated the machine. It's the tradesmen and craftsmen that can't be replaced. Not yet anyway.
Paul Harvey said decades ago that the future will need just that, craftsman, skilled service providers such as plumbers, electricians, and the like and recommended young adults head in that direction.
I'm not good with my hands, but I think it will be difficult for machines to replace the true human experience that can be done in creative writing, story telling, and writing in general. It just lacks the human emotion and connection. My experience with Chat GPT is that it is widely generic responses.
I talked to someone a few months ago who said they thought there would also be a break in the arts: generic AI and things created by real people.
I've been working in the IT sector for years and with each new generation of tools it brings with it automation and less need for personnel. What once took a team of developers can now be handled by one of two programmers and with LLM it can be handled by one.
With all that being said I think the future belongs to those with hard skills such as plumbers & electricians, those who can come up with creative solutions to problems and can bring new products to market, and those who can create passive income through investing.
It's definitely going to get interesting as AI now starts culling the employment of the white collar workers.
Good points WC. The machine is now coming for those in white collars who thought they were indispensable and who celebrated the machine. It's the tradesmen and craftsmen that can't be replaced. Not yet anyway.
Paul Harvey said decades ago that the future will need just that, craftsman, skilled service providers such as plumbers, electricians, and the like and recommended young adults head in that direction.
I'm not good with my hands, but I think it will be difficult for machines to replace the true human experience that can be done in creative writing, story telling, and writing in general. It just lacks the human emotion and connection. My experience with Chat GPT is that it is widely generic responses.
I talked to someone a few months ago who said they thought there would also be a break in the arts: generic AI and things created by real people.