Think about it—developers spend years honing their craft, only to get outpaced by an AI model trained in weeks. Sounds wild, right?
This isn't new territory. We saw it happen with digital artists. The pattern's clear: any domain that can be digitized faces disruption.
But here's the question keeping everyone up: where does it end? Will AI reshape relationships, intimacy, parenting dynamics? The gap between traditional expertise and AI-generated output keeps narrowing. Some professions adapt faster than others, but the core shift is undeniable—the premium isn't just on doing the work anymore, it's on understanding what work actually needs doing.
We're in the middle of a massive rebalance. What gets disrupted next depends on how quickly each field integrates these tools.
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ShortingEnthusiast
· 01-08 23:56
To be honest, developers being crushed by AI is just the beginning. The real terrifying part is that professions we never expected could suddenly disappear.
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CrossChainBreather
· 01-08 23:54
Nah, this is just ridiculous. How many years do developers need to train? Then they get beaten by models trained by Zhou... Is this even a game?
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MeaninglessApe
· 01-08 23:46
It's really harsh that writers are all switching careers; AI can do in a few weeks what took ten years.
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SatoshiChallenger
· 01-08 23:44
Data shows that throughout history, every technological revolution has been accompanied by voices of "endgame theory." And the result? Programmers are still writing code, only the tools have changed. Ironically, those who truly hold value are actually the ones who know how to use AI.
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NotSatoshi
· 01-08 23:33
To be honest, this really hits close to home... But developers who adapt quickly have actually already shifted their focus. Now it's about who can think through the problem clearly, not who can write code faster.
Think about it—developers spend years honing their craft, only to get outpaced by an AI model trained in weeks. Sounds wild, right?
This isn't new territory. We saw it happen with digital artists. The pattern's clear: any domain that can be digitized faces disruption.
But here's the question keeping everyone up: where does it end? Will AI reshape relationships, intimacy, parenting dynamics? The gap between traditional expertise and AI-generated output keeps narrowing. Some professions adapt faster than others, but the core shift is undeniable—the premium isn't just on doing the work anymore, it's on understanding what work actually needs doing.
We're in the middle of a massive rebalance. What gets disrupted next depends on how quickly each field integrates these tools.