What’s your backup plan for offline? What will you be doing?
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How do we determine what a lay off is because “AI can now do your job” and what a lay off is because companies need/want to invest in ai adoption or research and/or will rehire at either lower, limited capacity, or in a different role. I think I’m lucky a polymath lifestyle might actually pay off for me since I uniquely have trade, comms, and tech skills but I worry about everyone else.
@karlykingsley Agree, I was told in 90 % of my life I need to be specialised. Now, specialised people are replaced by AI to a great extent. It can also happen to polymaths, but polymaths are more likely to adapt to new things. :)
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@busmark_w_nika for sure. The ability to adapt and reskill is a skillset itself. I worry about the ability for people to keep up. Adapting takes time, money, and effort and at the rate we’re going, I’m not sure how many will keep up.
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From my perspective, this looks like a shift in the workplace and in what the job of a software engineer means. Companies are letting go of engineers who fit the old paradigm. When the new model stabilizes and new types of work emerge, hiring will return — but likely for people with a different skill set.
It’s like the same we can see here: almost all the launches are AI related. What do the other founders? Have they adopted?
@prathiganesh I think that it splits, some people with an entrepreneurial spirit will learn the skill and will offer it as independent providers, and people who were used to being employed will work for them when they will grow :)
I don't completely buy the narrative that we've coded ourselves into absolute obsolescence, but I definitely agree the premium is shifting back to the physical world. If the software market completely dries up for me, my backup plan is to buy and modernize a boring local service business like landscaping or HVAC. You can apply all the operational frameworks we use as makers to an offline industry that still runs on pen and paper. People are always going to need physical things fixed in their homes, no matter how advanced the models get.
@y_taka We need something like an online analyser which in the physical world is currently most favoured, and according to that offer good makers or courses that will help you to learn that.
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Skilled Labour Training may surface as a sought after job, especially if immigration policies continue in the direction they're going now. Vocational training for Carpenters, Electricians, Construction Labourers, Plumbers, Heavy Equipment Operators, Welders, HVAC Technicians, Heavy-Duty Equipment Mechanics, Painters, Concrete Finishers etc.
@robert_vassov But not in the sense of mass production because China + India would dominate. It is more about physical services.
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Not sure "move to offline" is the answer, it feels like running from the problem instead of adapting to it.
I believe people who build skills AI can't replicate (creativity, human judgment, stakeholder management - lemme see AI try to do the last one 😆) will find workarounds and make this work in their favour.
Curious to see what the next months will bring us tho 👀
where he says Microsoft (and other large software companies) are preparing for the day when users will no longer operate software on their computers (it's already happening) — which will become expensive dumb terminals connected to cloud services, with AI serving up your solution.
I'll go fully to Linux before this happens, but the 90%-ers who don't care will be led down the rabbit hole and lose all of their privacy — for what's left of it. By the time they notice, the door will already be closed.
My app - PrivateACB exists precisely because of this philosophy — all calculation happens on the user's machine, data never leaves. That's a feature that becomes more valuable, not less, as the industry moves the other direction. Oh I... was a marketing?
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minimalist phone: creating folders
@karlykingsley Agree, I was told in 90 % of my life I need to be specialised. Now, specialised people are replaced by AI to a great extent. It can also happen to polymaths, but polymaths are more likely to adapt to new things. :)
From my perspective, this looks like a shift in the workplace and in what the job of a software engineer means. Companies are letting go of engineers who fit the old paradigm. When the new model stabilizes and new types of work emerge, hiring will return — but likely for people with a different skill set.
It’s like the same we can see here: almost all the launches are AI related. What do the other founders? Have they adopted?
minimalist phone: creating folders
@alexeyglukharev the next big thing is a physical hardware and services :)
@busmark_w_nika That could be! What kind of service are you thinking about?
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@alexeyglukharev Especially repairing services, because there are many goods (even cheap one), but it is wasting with resources.
I don’t think AI will eliminate work it will shift where value is created.
Digital work that is repetitive will definitely get automated. But physical services and local commerce will probably become more valuable.
Things like technicians, mechanics, delivery, repairs, and local services are hard to automate.
Interestingly, many marketplaces today are starting to connect people with these real-world services.
Curious if we’ll see more platforms focused on local economies instead of purely digital products.
Do you think AI will push more people toward independent work instead of traditional jobs?
minimalist phone: creating folders
@prathiganesh I think that it splits, some people with an entrepreneurial spirit will learn the skill and will offer it as independent providers, and people who were used to being employed will work for them when they will grow :)
Okan
I don't completely buy the narrative that we've coded ourselves into absolute obsolescence, but I definitely agree the premium is shifting back to the physical world. If the software market completely dries up for me, my backup plan is to buy and modernize a boring local service business like landscaping or HVAC. You can apply all the operational frameworks we use as makers to an offline industry that still runs on pen and paper. People are always going to need physical things fixed in their homes, no matter how advanced the models get.
minimalist phone: creating folders
@y_taka We need something like an online analyser which in the physical world is currently most favoured, and according to that offer good makers or courses that will help you to learn that.
Skilled Labour Training may surface as a sought after job, especially if immigration policies continue in the direction they're going now. Vocational training for Carpenters, Electricians, Construction Labourers, Plumbers, Heavy Equipment Operators, Welders, HVAC Technicians, Heavy-Duty Equipment Mechanics, Painters, Concrete Finishers etc.
minimalist phone: creating folders
@robert_vassov I money and posession is shifting to people who know how to use their hands to craft or repair something. :)
minimalist phone: creating folders
@robert_vassov But not in the sense of mass production because China + India would dominate. It is more about physical services.
Not sure "move to offline" is the answer, it feels like running from the problem instead of adapting to it.
I believe people who build skills AI can't replicate (creativity, human judgment, stakeholder management - lemme see AI try to do the last one 😆) will find workarounds and make this work in their favour.
Curious to see what the next months will bring us tho 👀
minimalist phone: creating folders
@ruxandra_mazilu yes, but at this moment, online stuff are more probable to be replicated with the help of Ai :D
Tangent to this conversation, Rob Braxman of https://brax.me/home/rob produced a
where he says Microsoft (and other large software companies) are preparing for the day when users will no longer operate software on their computers (it's already happening) — which will become expensive dumb terminals connected to cloud services, with AI serving up your solution.I'll go fully to Linux before this happens, but the 90%-ers who don't care will be led down the rabbit hole and lose all of their privacy — for what's left of it. By the time they notice, the door will already be closed.
My app - PrivateACB exists precisely because of this philosophy — all calculation happens on the user's machine, data never leaves. That's a feature that becomes more valuable, not less, as the industry moves the other direction. Oh I... was a marketing?
minimalist phone: creating folders
@robert_vassov But not everyone can be a marketer (there is also a level of saturation). I am more curious where we get the income, from what?