For technical work, AI can definitely be helpful, but as a tool, not replacement. I work in software development and have used AI to tell me why test runs were running out of memory, after a few suggestions that didn’t work, it did give me the right answer (it was a wrong and unnecessary annotation). Also things like “what is the syntax for configuring a proxy with this-or-that command”.
The thing about technical work is that no matter if the solution is made by humans or AI, you still have to, and can, verify if it actually works. If you ask AI factual questions you genuinely don’t know the answer to and have no way of verifying, it’s your own fault if they are wrong.
For technical work, AI can definitely be helpful, but as a tool, not replacement. I work in software development and have used AI to tell me why test runs were running out of memory, after a few suggestions that didn’t work, it did give me the right answer (it was a wrong and unnecessary annotation). Also things like “what is the syntax for configuring a proxy with this-or-that command”.
The thing about technical work is that no matter if the solution is made by humans or AI, you still have to, and can, verify if it actually works. If you ask AI factual questions you genuinely don’t know the answer to and have no way of verifying, it’s your own fault if they are wrong.