Skank_Hunt49
Skank_Hunt49 t1_itx4auk wrote
Reply to comment by BinyaminDelta in How should an individual best prepare for the next five - ten years? by BinyaminDelta
I understand where you’re coming from. I’m in a niche industry where technical writing skills are needed. Being educated enough to understand the topic enough to write a report isn’t something you learn in high school. We didn’t need the AI to do the math, we just needed it to do entry level work.
Skank_Hunt49 t1_itpuyfi wrote
Reply to comment by imlaggingsobad in How should an individual best prepare for the next five - ten years? by BinyaminDelta
I used clerk as a generic term for a program manager that does mundane tasks such as report and document writing. We fed our team’s output to the AI, it learned to mimic our style well enough that allowing it to read actual data produced a decent draft. This eliminated the need to hire someone with the skills equivalent to a BS in Business.
Skank_Hunt49 t1_itos1je wrote
Developing technical skills is the best way to be Anti-Fragile in a dynamic world. One of black swan events will continue to disrupt the current status quo. This can be positive (new tech) or negative (lockdowns). In each edition of “Global Trends” the Atlantic Council (a highly respected think tank) has highlighted shrinking jobs in the unskilled fields, and increasing automation in professional services. We’re already are seeing this in accounting, and my last job we used a fork of GPT-3 to avoid hiring another clerk.
Skank_Hunt49 t1_itx4htu wrote
Reply to comment by KLBS38 in How should an individual best prepare for the next five - ten years? by BinyaminDelta
Learn to code, that and any kind of STEM degree will be future proof.