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SWBTATTReg

(26,022 posts)
16. I totally agree. When the IT revolution rolled in during the late 60s, early 70s/80s, we were just seeing the beginning
Sat Dec 27, 2025, 06:25 PM
Dec 27

of all the things that could be done w/ IT w/ the millions of tasks that IT could do. It'll be the same way w/ AI. Every time it seems like, when a new technology comes in, that everything will be changed overnight, and that that the heavens will part, and all will be done perfectly!

Those of you who have worked in bringing technology into the workplace, and teaching others in your workplace and home, know exactly what I'm talking about. It takes time (building the vast amount of labor required to write AI, etc.), as well as finding the money to replace the old IT code by the trillions of line of code, it costs money, lots of money.

Be well.

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1 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

If it don't make pizza, it ain't worth nothing. /nt bucolic_frolic Dec 27 #1
Might I add that you can only divide the pie of potential users so far. There is no way all of these data flashman13 Dec 27 #2
In the end I think what you'll see is Amazo, Microsoft and Google be the dominant three. cstanleytech Dec 27 #4
In the end the big guys will gobble up everyone else for pennies on the dollar. flashman13 Dec 27 #5
Well I got agree there as when it comes to writing they are extremely limited. cstanleytech Dec 27 #3
Yep. not fooled Dec 27 #7
Even it's factual questions can be flawed so you should always verify as some Trump lawyers are learning right now. cstanleytech Dec 27 #14
So don't use AI for writing. Anything you write with it isn't your work anyway and can't be copyrighted. highplainsdem Dec 27 #11
I don't, I have tested it out though and it's just not at the point where it'll replace a human being. cstanleytech Dec 27 #13
One serious limit: AI bots are completely incapable of actual logic William Seger Dec 27 #6
While he's correct, it doesn't matter. Shipwack Dec 27 #8
AI isn't really that much intelligence (for now at least), it is automation on steroids ToxMarz Dec 27 #9
I heard the same thing from an industry insider mdbl Dec 27 #10
The venture capital bubble may burst, but that's not going to stop the research. LudwigPastorius Dec 27 #12
That article is nothing but pro-AI hype from someone incapable of being objective about AI. He's highplainsdem Dec 27 #15
I totally agree. When the IT revolution rolled in during the late 60s, early 70s/80s, we were just seeing the beginning SWBTATTReg Dec 27 #16
We already have examples of computer aided 'reality' presentations. Aussie105 Sunday #17
The only benefit I can see from any of this is to the employers FakeNoose Sunday #18
One setting of Ara does indeed talk back Polybius Sunday #19
Company owners and bosses don't use that setting FakeNoose Sunday #20
Yep, that's true Polybius Sunday #21
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