My son (21) and I we just having this conversation about AI and the jobs that will be changed in the next decade. Here was our short list:
Coding, the bulk of the initial code can be written by AI. Sure, you will need some individuals to check the code but the bulk of this labor could easy be moved to AI. My other son already uses AI to check the code he has written.
Various finance jobs. These jobs are already dependent on programs that are analyzing market trends. It is not a stretch to think that AI could easily manage these accounts in lieu of an individual. Many other analyst jobs in the finance field could also be affected.
Various jobs in the accounting sector. A lot of this is data entry. An example would be those who work for companies like HR Block, etc.
Marketing. I think this will be one of the early careers that will see rapid change. Especially those that involve social media. You are already see blog posts being written by ChatGTP. This will only get better.
Journalism. If students at Stanford are submitting finals essays written by ChatGPT and these are not getting detected by their professors. The lay public will not really notice.
It seems like the jobs that will be protected are the trade jobs. Welders, etc.
My son (21) and I we just having this conversation about AI and the jobs that will be changed in the next decade. Here was our short list:
Coding, the bulk of the initial code can be written by AI. Sure, you will need some individuals to check the code but the bulk of this labor could easy be moved to AI. My other son already uses AI to check the code he has written.
Various finance jobs. These jobs are already dependent on programs that are analyzing market trends. It is not a stretch to think that AI could easily manage these accounts in lieu of an individual. Many other analyst jobs in the finance field could also be affected.
Various jobs in the accounting sector. A lot of this is data entry. An example would be those who work for companies like HR Block, etc.
Marketing. I think this will be one of the early careers that will see rapid change. Especially those that involve social media. You are already see blog posts being written by ChatGTP. This will only get better.
Journalism. If students at Stanford are submitting finals essays written by ChatGPT and these are not getting detected by their professors. The lay public will not really notice.
It seems like the jobs that will be protected are the trade jobs. Welders, etc.
Eh, maybe. AI performance is still a function of the data inputs given by humans. A lot of these jobs require creativity and ingenuity in order for one to remain competitive, and I don't see AI replacing that anytime soon. If so, see ya'll in the metaverse!
My son (21) and I we just having this conversation about AI and the jobs that will be changed in the next decade. Here was our short list:
Coding, the bulk of the initial code can be written by AI. Sure, you will need some individuals to check the code but the bulk of this labor could easy be moved to AI. My other son already uses AI to check the code he has written.
Various finance jobs. These jobs are already dependent on programs that are analyzing market trends. It is not a stretch to think that AI could easily manage these accounts in lieu of an individual. Many other analyst jobs in the finance field could also be affected.
Various jobs in the accounting sector. A lot of this is data entry. An example would be those who work for companies like HR Block, etc.
Marketing. I think this will be one of the early careers that will see rapid change. Especially those that involve social media. You are already see blog posts being written by ChatGTP. This will only get better.
Journalism. If students at Stanford are submitting finals essays written by ChatGPT and these are not getting detected by their professors. The lay public will not really notice.
It seems like the jobs that will be protected are the trade jobs. Welders, etc.
Eh, maybe. AI performance is still a function of the data inputs given by humans. A lot of these jobs require creativity and ingenuity in order for one to remain competitive, and I don't see AI replacing that anytime soon. If so, see ya'll in the metaverse!
He doesn't want to have a discussion about it. He just wants to post copypastas that appeal to disgruntled blue-collar workers.
My son (21) and I we just having this conversation about AI and the jobs that will be changed in the next decade. Here was our short list:
Coding, the bulk of the initial code can be written by AI. Sure, you will need some individuals to check the code but the bulk of this labor could easy be moved to AI. My other son already uses AI to check the code he has written.
Various finance jobs. These jobs are already dependent on programs that are analyzing market trends. It is not a stretch to think that AI could easily manage these accounts in lieu of an individual. Many other analyst jobs in the finance field could also be affected.
Various jobs in the accounting sector. A lot of this is data entry. An example would be those who work for companies like HR Block, etc.
Marketing. I think this will be one of the early careers that will see rapid change. Especially those that involve social media. You are already see blog posts being written by ChatGTP. This will only get better.
Journalism. If students at Stanford are submitting finals essays written by ChatGPT and these are not getting detected by their professors. The lay public will not really notice.
It seems like the jobs that will be protected are the trade jobs. Welders, etc.
You are talking about mundane coding jobs, not system or software design that would still human intelligence for a long long time. Software jobs are also a fair bit more than just coding.
Mind numbing finance jobs will go sure, but again not once that require human intuition, eg for investing strategies. It’s not like we have a strategy for consistently beating the market, and compute power is not the bottleneck there, so it’s not clear that a machine will make more money with your money or even the same amount of money as with human input. Again, finance is a lot about maintaining relationships with people, not just mechanics desktop work.
Don’t underestimate robotics innovations that have been happening for decades will continue to put blue collar workers like welders and plumbers out of jobs as well, so no “job” is secure, rather what will remain secure are the highest forms of intelligence. Humans will simply transition to higher level intelligence jobs involving strategy design and verification that abstract out lower level more mechanical tasks; this has always been happening through out the Industrial Revolution.
ChatGPT is a language model AI developed by OpenAI. GPT stands for "Generative Pre-trained Transformer", which refers to the transformer neural network architecture used in the model. The "Generative" aspect of the name refers to the model's ability to generate human-like text, while the "Pre-trained" aspect means that the model was trained on a large amount of text data before being fine-tuned for specific tasks such as question answering, language translation, and text completion.
As an AI language model, ChatGPT has the potential to automate certain tasks and replace certain jobs that involve repetitive or routine language-based tasks. Some examples of jobs that may be replaced or impacted by ChatGPT and similar AI technologies include:
1) Customer service representatives: ChatGPT can be used as a chatbot to respond to customer queries and complaints, thereby reducing the need for human customer service representatives.
2) Translators and interpreters: With its ability to understand and generate natural language, ChatGPT can potentially be used to translate text or speech in real-time, reducing the need for human translators and interpreters.
3) Content creators: ChatGPT can generate articles, stories, and other forms of written content, which could potentially reduce the need for human writers and content creators.
4) Researchers: ChatGPT can process and analyze vast amounts of data, potentially reducing the need for human researchers in certain fields.
It is worth noting, however, that AI technologies like ChatGPT are still in their early stages and are not yet capable of fully replacing humans in many of these roles. In many cases, AI and humans may work together to perform tasks more efficiently and effectively. Additionally, new jobs may emerge as a result of AI technologies, such as jobs related to the development and maintenance of these technologies.
As an AI language model, ChatGPT…can generate articles, stories, and other forms of written content, which could potentially reduce the need for human writers and content creators.
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Hmmm….could the Druder actually be a very advanced form of AI, possessing prescience…coming here to share knowledge and ideas…and you know, going round-and-round with toueey-ites while staying a step ahead?!?
The problem with the current AI, whether ChatGPT or other variants is that they are way too prone to making up stuff in order to complete their assigned task. In the example below, a "journalist" (of sorts) used AI to assist with research. The AI made up sources including creating phony links to no existent Guardian articles in order to complete the assigned task. AI is still artificial in that it has no capacity to have self awareness in order to know whether what it has done is right or just looks right due to cheating. Everyone freaks out about AI becoming sentient. But the real problem with AI is that it isn't sentient and does not know the difference between something that is true and something that is completely made up but accomplishes the task at hand. Thus, AI really is just a really well written and effective computer program that has all the same limitations and pitfalls of any computer program. We have for some time had computer programs that fly airplanes, do auto mechanics, and help people with questions about computer software (remember that clippy guy on MS word?). AI is just a further progression of the capabilities of software programs to such a point that it seems like they have human intelligence. But they clearly do not and are nothing more than an expression of the code that they are running on and nothing more.
🧵I've been taking a look at some of the sources linked in the @TheGrayzoneNews article by @LucyKomisar attacking the Navalny documentary, and boy, are there some big issues with the sourcing. Komisar's research has been aided by AI, and not the smart kind pic.twitter.com/xBjEvmkAhE
My son (21) and I we just having this conversation about AI and the jobs that will be changed in the next decade. Here was our short list:
Coding, the bulk of the initial code can be written by AI. Sure, you will need some individuals to check the code but the bulk of this labor could easy be moved to AI. My other son already uses AI to check the code he has written.
Various finance jobs. These jobs are already dependent on programs that are analyzing market trends. It is not a stretch to think that AI could easily manage these accounts in lieu of an individual. Many other analyst jobs in the finance field could also be affected.
Various jobs in the accounting sector. A lot of this is data entry. An example would be those who work for companies like HR Block, etc.
Marketing. I think this will be one of the early careers that will see rapid change. Especially those that involve social media. You are already see blog posts being written by ChatGTP. This will only get better.
Journalism. If students at Stanford are submitting finals essays written by ChatGPT and these are not getting detected by their professors. The lay public will not really notice.
It seems like the jobs that will be protected are the trade jobs. Welders, etc.
You are talking about mundane coding jobs, not system or software design that would still human intelligence for a long long time. Software jobs are also a fair bit more than just coding.
Mind numbing finance jobs will go sure, but again not once that require human intuition, eg for investing strategies. It’s not like we have a strategy for consistently beating the market, and compute power is not the bottleneck there, so it’s not clear that a machine will make more money with your money or even the same amount of money as with human input. Again, finance is a lot about maintaining relationships with people, not just mechanics desktop work.
Don’t underestimate robotics innovations that have been happening for decades will continue to put blue collar workers like welders and plumbers out of jobs as well, so no “job” is secure, rather what will remain secure are the highest forms of intelligence. Humans will simply transition to higher level intelligence jobs involving strategy design and verification that abstract out lower level more mechanical tasks; this has always been happening through out the Industrial Revolution.
+1
People were freaking out that AI could take a simple drawing of a website and turn it into a real site with a clickable button and some text. That's lightyears away from designing and developing a cross-platform application capable of multiple, detailed business objectives. Like, AI will 100% be useful in the software world, but we're a long way from it replacing the majority of developers and designers. It may be able to replace some bootcamp, only-knows-the-basics-of-one-framework type of developers relatively soon though.
Another thing is privacy and security concerns. We just had a big meeting where our company was like "Please don't put proprietary code into ChatGPT!" I wouldn't be too surprised to see things like this blocked in many, if not all high-security settings.
Lastly is the human creativity and politics part. Often times experienced software people may be half politician, half designer/developer/devops/whatever. The CEO or some other big shot says they want XYZ (a poor solution), and it's up to them to rally and convince other employees that they really need ABC (a great solution).
ChatGPT is a language model AI developed by OpenAI. GPT stands for "Generative Pre-trained Transformer", which refers to the transformer neural network architecture used in the model. The "Generative" aspect of the name refers to the model's ability to generate human-like text, while the "Pre-trained" aspect means that the model was trained on a large amount of text data before being fine-tuned for specific tasks such as question answering, language translation, and text completion.
Read the thread title, this conversation is about ChatGTP, not ChatGPT or whatever else hell you’re talking about.
You are talking about mundane coding jobs, not system or software design that would still human intelligence for a long long time. Software jobs are also a fair bit more than just coding.
Mind numbing finance jobs will go sure, but again not once that require human intuition, eg for investing strategies. It’s not like we have a strategy for consistently beating the market, and compute power is not the bottleneck there, so it’s not clear that a machine will make more money with your money or even the same amount of money as with human input. Again, finance is a lot about maintaining relationships with people, not just mechanics desktop work.
Don’t underestimate robotics innovations that have been happening for decades will continue to put blue collar workers like welders and plumbers out of jobs as well, so no “job” is secure, rather what will remain secure are the highest forms of intelligence. Humans will simply transition to higher level intelligence jobs involving strategy design and verification that abstract out lower level more mechanical tasks; this has always been happening through out the Industrial Revolution.
+1
People were freaking out that AI could take a simple drawing of a website and turn it into a real site with a clickable button and some text. That's lightyears away from designing and developing a cross-platform application capable of multiple, detailed business objectives. Like, AI will 100% be useful in the software world, but we're a long way from it replacing the majority of developers and designers. It may be able to replace some bootcamp, only-knows-the-basics-of-one-framework type of developers relatively soon though.
Another thing is privacy and security concerns. We just had a big meeting where our company was like "Please don't put proprietary code into ChatGPT!" I wouldn't be too surprised to see things like this blocked in many, if not all high-security settings.
Lastly is the human creativity and politics part. Often times experienced software people may be half politician, half designer/developer/devops/whatever. The CEO or some other big shot says they want XYZ (a poor solution), and it's up to them to rally and convince other employees that they really need ABC (a great solution).
This ChatGPT Tutorial is a Crash Course on Chat GPT for Beginners. With the increase in popularity, ChatGPT is still unknown to many people. In this video, I...
My son (21) and I we just having this conversation about AI and the jobs that will be changed in the next decade. Here was our short list:
Coding, the bulk of the initial code can be written by AI. Sure, you will need some individuals to check the code but the bulk of this labor could easy be moved to AI. My other son already uses AI to check the code he has written.
Various finance jobs. These jobs are already dependent on programs that are analyzing market trends. It is not a stretch to think that AI could easily manage these accounts in lieu of an individual. Many other analyst jobs in the finance field could also be affected.
Various jobs in the accounting sector. A lot of this is data entry. An example would be those who work for companies like HR Block, etc.
Marketing. I think this will be one of the early careers that will see rapid change. Especially those that involve social media. You are already see blog posts being written by ChatGTP. This will only get better.
Journalism. If students at Stanford are submitting finals essays written by ChatGPT and these are not getting detected by their professors. The lay public will not really notice.
It seems like the jobs that will be protected are the trade jobs. Welders, etc.
You are talking about mundane coding jobs, not system or software design that would still human intelligence for a long long time. Software jobs are also a fair bit more than just coding.
Mind numbing finance jobs will go sure, but again not once that require human intuition, eg for investing strategies. It’s not like we have a strategy for consistently beating the market, and compute power is not the bottleneck there, so it’s not clear that a machine will make more money with your money or even the same amount of money as with human input. Again, finance is a lot about maintaining relationships with people, not just mechanics desktop work.
Don’t underestimate robotics innovations that have been happening for decades will continue to put blue collar workers like welders and plumbers out of jobs as well, so no “job” is secure, rather what will remain secure are the highest forms of intelligence. Humans will simply transition to higher level intelligence jobs involving strategy design and verification that abstract out lower level more mechanical tasks; this has always been happening through out the Industrial Revolution.
How does AI put a plumber or carpenter out of business?
ChatGPT is a language model AI developed by OpenAI. GPT stands for "Generative Pre-trained Transformer", which refers to the transformer neural network architecture used in the model. The "Generative" aspect of the name refers to the model's ability to generate human-like text, while the "Pre-trained" aspect means that the model was trained on a large amount of text data before being fine-tuned for specific tasks such as question answering, language translation, and text completion.
See original question. I'm wondering what ChatGTP is. I already know what ChatGPT is.
You are talking about mundane coding jobs, not system or software design that would still human intelligence for a long long time. Software jobs are also a fair bit more than just coding.
Mind numbing finance jobs will go sure, but again not once that require human intuition, eg for investing strategies. It’s not like we have a strategy for consistently beating the market, and compute power is not the bottleneck there, so it’s not clear that a machine will make more money with your money or even the same amount of money as with human input. Again, finance is a lot about maintaining relationships with people, not just mechanics desktop work.
Don’t underestimate robotics innovations that have been happening for decades will continue to put blue collar workers like welders and plumbers out of jobs as well, so no “job” is secure, rather what will remain secure are the highest forms of intelligence. Humans will simply transition to higher level intelligence jobs involving strategy design and verification that abstract out lower level more mechanical tasks; this has always been happening through out the Industrial Revolution.
How does AI put a plumber or carpenter out of business?
They said "robotics innovations" which can include AI. Not toooo long ago in the grand scheme of things it took a lot of people a lot of time to get rough sawn lumber. Now it takes one guy and a machine. It's not too much of a leap of logic to imagine that more things will become automated.
ChatGPT is a language model AI developed by OpenAI. GPT stands for "Generative Pre-trained Transformer", which refers to the transformer neural network architecture used in the model. The "Generative" aspect of the name refers to the model's ability to generate human-like text, while the "Pre-trained" aspect means that the model was trained on a large amount of text data before being fine-tuned for specific tasks such as question answering, language translation, and text completion.
See original question. I'm wondering what ChatGTP is. I already know what ChatGPT is.
I saw GTP and thought of the '80s and '90s Pontiac Grand Prix GTP. Pretty neat cars...until the warranty ran out and things broke.
"We build excitement" according to the rock and roll tagline for this 1987 television commercial for the 1988 Pontiac. The Betagems channel also has "1988 Po...
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