It's so refreshing to see someone recognizing the mass-spread denial of HN commentariat on GPT4.
What HN commentariat doesn't realize is that many of them will be made redundant.
And "many new jobs are created" is such a bloated, empty statement in the wake of GPT4 like techs. We all know that all technological improvements in recent decades have led to more inequality. No questions about that.
The interesting bit is that tech people are used to displacing other people's jobs and then telling them to suck it up so it's no wonder that they're in denial: this is the first time that it is their jobs that are at stake and they seem to be about as agile as a deer frozen in the headlights of an oncoming truck. We'll see how it all plays out. Jokes along the line of 'better behave or I'll replace you with a script' are not nearly as funny as they once seemed to be.
Agreed with both you and GP. The denial is a normal emotional response. It's not strange to cling to your decades of professional experience and skillset. It's just that, now really is not the time for emotional responses. It's time to start running away from the crowd so that you're one of those not made redundant. You can grieve the lost innocence of days past later.
I do Computer Vision research for a company, and wanted to go to Academia (in US/UK/NA/EU). That's a too risky career choice now, and has always been. What if I am not as brilliant as I think and cannot meaningfully contribute to Science? (Or don't get tenure?) Wanted to do either ML + fundamental Science or Edge AI.
Thinking of going to med school. I am sure I can qualify. So thinking of preparing for that while keeping my industry job.
Another option is going into Administration, i.e. government jobs, by qualifying something called UPSC (I am in India).
I fully understand what's going on and I am under no denial that many jobs in many sectors will be made redundant and competition will skyrocket. Societal turmoil is inevitable.
I am just 23 and weighing in my options. My days are so emotional and full of dilemmas and trilemmas.
I keep myself sane by doing my job, side hustle, dogs, family, and friends. I will be depressed if I ponder too much into these.
You make some very interesting points. I would be very interested to read about your future deliberations, if you post them anywhere (your bio links to your website).
I don't write personal stuff there. If you leave me an email- if you want, I will make sure to let you know if I write something in the line of our communication.
The thing is unlike the rise of the PC based tools, with the rise of LLMs it is too hard to see what the safe careers are. Careers that might be safe and have high income potential are mostly not quick to switch to.
Yeah, there is no universe where there is enough demand for plumbers to sustain even the same order of magnitude of number of jobs for even a smaller category of knowledge work. And when you unleash millions of plumbers, the wages won't look better than McDonalds.
The market can never be big enough for plumbers to absorb even a tiny bit of knowledge workers. There is not enough plumbing to be done. Also if a lot of people do try to become plumbers, the wages will plummet similar to other jobs where availability of labour is high. Your statement will hold true if 2x more people wanted to enter plumbing, not 20x or 200x.
What HN commentariat doesn't realize is that many of them will be made redundant.
And "many new jobs are created" is such a bloated, empty statement in the wake of GPT4 like techs. We all know that all technological improvements in recent decades have led to more inequality. No questions about that.
LLMs, AI will lead more to that.