It's so sad that this AI movement never even considers solving problems for humans. They solve problems for companies.
There are so many problems in the world that tech can solve. Heck, do you have to look far to see how disproportionate even the tech is evolving?
But we decide to solve pr... See more
Artem Zakharchenkotwitter.comIt's so sad that this AI movement never even considers solving problems for humans. They solve problems for companies. There are so many problems in the world that tech can solve. Heck, do you have to look far to see how disproportionate even the tech is evolving? But we decide to solve problems that only companies care about. Replace workers with more "efficient" force. I think people would like their jobs thank you very much. Somehow, those startups are not solving inaccessible education, terrible healthcare, misinformation, bias, pollution, global warming, safety, class inequality. Quite the opposite. Many AI companies aim to make those problems even worse.
I feel such a disconnect between the AI design tools I see and what’d actually meaningfully impact how I work as a Product Designer.
It’s like everyone is reducing design to the last 1% that is drawing the UI instead of what’s actually hard: thinking, aligning with humans, etc.
Vincent van der Meulenx.comI think it’s morally repugnant to NOT use AI
You’re wasting human life, human energy, and human potential on wasteful, inefficient tasks a machine could easily perform
Tiago Fortex.comQuick take: AI education is severely lacking
There's a huge disconnect between flashy AI demos and practical, real-world applications. Especially outside the AI Twitter bubble.
As someone who writes a daily AI newsletter to over 650,000 readers, I've noticed that even among early adopters, t... See more
Rowan Cheungx.com