> But there’s another dimension to the picture. Some workers will find it easier to adapt, the researchers argue, based on factors like their savings, age and transferrable skills.
> Most web designers will be fine. Many secretaries will not. The most vulnerable occupations are largely held by women.
[0]: https://www.brookings.edu/articles/measuring-us-workers-capa...
(Thought experiment: do I want an AI robot to perform a surgery on me, if it only has 2% chance of hallucinating? My answer is no, bring the surgeon)
Yes - this means software engineers are likely the first to go, along with other high paying computer jobs.
I know ten people who work across Accounting and Finance in high-level positions who have all told me that in the past few months, the LLM-steam has wore off and they aren't seeing any material benefits.
Nope. Grab a random person off the street and ask them to write Enterprise software using an AI. Good luck with that.
The job will change but it still requires a lot of deep knowledge about software development to be effective with AI.
Nobody read their presentations and documents, and they are already using ChatGPT to make them and do their “mission, vision, strategy” bullshit
In any event adoption of tech can take time as hard as it might be to believe.
It might not take 40 years for factories to adopt electricity when it comes to AI.
I am yet to see a robot that could clean my bathroom. And I have a pretty basic bathroom: a toilet, a shower, a bathtub, a sink, a mirror, some shelves, laundry baskets, a washing machine, a window, a door, a floor.
How would you design a robot that can clean all of those?
From a jobs to be done perspective of any housekeeping task, there is a lot more progress in the past year than I realized. I thought the same until it was shared with me.
There are others as well, quite a few out of China.
2 weeks ago: robot on the line in BMW production https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B2uPkPLijgs