Comment by rocmcd
If this is true, then shouldn't we expect an economic "bump" from NN/LLMs/AI as they are today?
I have not noticed companies or colleagues 10x'ing (hell, or even 1.5x'ing) their productivity from these tools. What am I missing?
If this is true, then shouldn't we expect an economic "bump" from NN/LLMs/AI as they are today?
I have not noticed companies or colleagues 10x'ing (hell, or even 1.5x'ing) their productivity from these tools. What am I missing?
What do your colleagues do?
I see people getting replaced by AI left and right.
Translators, illustrators, voice over artists, data researchers, photographers, models, writers, personal assistants, drivers, programmers ...
There's an implicit assumption here that if a colleague did figure out how to (e.g.) 10x their output with new tools, the employer would capture all (e.g.) 10x of that increased productivity.