@dalibali2 Yes, that’s partially true, but that has from some point until now always been the case, and why these problems develop is not directly from technology, even if it plays a role, but because of the education system itself.
@curiouswavefn That’s true if we see it from the perspective of automation, but what ultimately remain are creativity and social interactions, and those can currently only be provided by humans, even if something is more efficient. This matters especially in the long term.
@konstructivizm That’s pretty fascinating, and we’ll see how it will then look in practice, but planning ahead and pursuing the vision is already the first step.
@haydendevs That’s true! But how should you ever have come to the idea of asking how a microwave works if you have never encountered a microwave in your life?
@BenjaminDEKR If you cannot abstract properly what you are searching for, any prompt you bring to your LLM does not take you further. Would it not be better to consult an expert on the problem you are facing, someone who can analyse critically on site where you are heading?
@bugmango@freeshreeda Maybe the early tools and structures we built are mimetics of nature. I love the aesthetic, and maybe going back to some roots of how we worked and avoiding from time to time the modernistic interiors where we work can bring new ideas.
@bugmango@freeshreeda The environment, especially nature, can spontaneously reproduce ideas that we can use in our work and in our overall life. This is where all ideas have begun, on which we have built the foundation of human civilization.
Hi! I’m a 20-year-old programmer from Europe 🇪🇺.
Starting from zero in AI and learning in public:
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My goal: break into the startup scene and build real things with AI.