I've often felt that AI is a bit like virtual reality - it's promised a lot over the decades and is undoubtedly better than previous iterations, but it's still not a substitute for the real thing.
Take the example of code writing. It will help make engineering faster, but you still need to know what to ask for and then what do with it. Until AI can guess what we need and how and where we want it implemented, how can it really replace a human?
Gameplan492 t1_jczru9p wrote
Reply to AI displacing jobs is a red herring, how we self-organize is the more fundamental trend by mjrossman
I've often felt that AI is a bit like virtual reality - it's promised a lot over the decades and is undoubtedly better than previous iterations, but it's still not a substitute for the real thing.
Take the example of code writing. It will help make engineering faster, but you still need to know what to ask for and then what do with it. Until AI can guess what we need and how and where we want it implemented, how can it really replace a human?