Back when I was doing S-100, my boss mentioned TRS-80 or something of the sort. I advised him to get involved “while computers were still understandable”.
But, as others have mentioned, the problem solving skills are portable.
When MS “invented” the GUI (they didn’t), we command-line folks referred to MS admins as “button pushers”, and I ran across many examples of where command lines worked where GUI tools failed (try partitioning a disk with that little cursor). I repartitioned many a disk on which my helper created overlapping partitions.
Now that we get answers “for everything” (we don’t) then people think like the (reputed) statement that "Everything that can be invented has been invented."
You might explain, so that they don’t learn the hard way, that ChatGPT is “uncomfortable” in new pickles, the ones that are the most important to solve, and that videos aren’t as useful as static content when you need to refer to one particular point or points, and that the trillions of bits out there on the internet aren’t like a book (even an e-book) in terms of being coherent, connected and focused.
It’s like relying on your brain to piece things together, and to shoehorn chat results into the problem at hand, or the one coming at you like an 18-wheeler, when there are alternatives available.
But I’ll go back to the problem-solving aspect. If all you get are answers, you’ll never be able to solve a new problem, and things change.