> When something goes awry, this will require someone who can dig through the network to find what went wrong, why it went wrong and how to repair it: an A.I. plumber, so to speak, who must snake the pipes of the entire system.
I suspect most people here aren't sticking around for this.
https://archive.is/H7FUd
> When something goes awry, this will require someone who can dig through the network to find what went wrong, why it went wrong and how to repair it: an A.I. plumber, so to speak, who must snake the pipes of the entire system.
I suspect most people here aren't sticking around for this.
Ironies of Automation. This is exactly what happened with every new level of automation. Absolutely worth a read.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ironies_of_Automation
And the actual PDF: https://web.archive.org/web/20200717054958if_/https://www.is...
> an A.I. plumber, so to speak
So, ... a programmer?
I'll be here, charging 10x what I normally do.
Is "writing false-hope listicles to pacify layoff-victims-to-be" on the list?
Yes. It is on the list of jobs that will be lost to AI tool use.