I think material science is where AI will really shine and bring about massive changes for what we build, how we build them and what they're made of up. similar to how some code can be successfully refactored using AI, i think it'll eventually be used to take into account different systems and buildings etc to come up with something different. we're not talking about something that's an expert in one thing but something that would be an expert in everything.
True. But we still have houses less than 120 years old that the new shyt won't work on. Even if we get the new shyt next year there will still be decades of houses and buildings that have to be retrofitted and that's gonna take a human and going to cost a lot of money.
What's wild to me is with the internet you can learn to do anything, it's just a matter of time, tools and material.
It used to be you didnt know how to do shyt without being in the industry. I've seen people perform outpatient surgery, remove cysts, remove teeth. Learned from YouTube and performed on YouTube. Same with plumbing and electrical, car maintenance, builds and performance. And now that pretty much any and every book is going to have a digital version, you can get that without being "in the industry" (and free
)
My friend's wife is caught between this scam/career opportunity for medical coding. She aced the first part of it and has like 4 months left of she decides to finish, but there's no jobs because ai/cpu software has taken up all the entry level work and the only thing that really requires human eyes are denials.
Back in the 80s and 90s you could get a job at a doctor's office or even a hospital in billing or whatever and learn on the job and with the systems. Now there's a certification they want you to have as well as 2 years of experience and that stills doesn't get you a career or job as a medical coder. The old heads are retiring and they aren't being replaced because the CPU/so work is getting better. And even though these jobs are "in demand" there's so many hoops and shyt one has to go through, it's kind of like a mlm/scam in that 1 in 8 people will succeed and it doesn't justify the amount of people that go through the "programs". There's colleges that will give you an associates degree for something that has never needed a degree before and doesn't really mean anything, but it's in a way more formal than having completed a course or program and gotten a degree.
These young kids are fukked.