Because I’m seeing more and more each day people once considered experts now on the same level as an untrained person who knows how to type. And I’m really hoping LLMs reach a tipping point because otherwise, you’re just adding another nauseating element to the rat race.

I’m no stranger to the “adapt or get left behind” comments, and it’s very funny when people tell me this but can no longer tell me how a for loop works or what constitutes an outer join.

lol hate to say it but this shithole needs to humbled by an act of war that brings down the power grid, capitalist realism is quickly turning into economic and technological realism (if it hasn’t already).

  • supplier [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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    17 hours ago

    Ch*t gee pee tea and the like are just in a marketing bubble. They’ve got all this investor money, but the research and development can’t improve as quickly as it needs to, so all that money just gets dumped into marketing. But it literally cannot go on forever, and industries will suffer from integrating it.

    You won’t even remember it after the collapse coming in '28

    • supafuzz [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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      16 hours ago

      '28 is generous I think, this shit is so expensive to run and if there’s no profitable use case it’ll crash sooner and harder than that

      the real concern is that this is the tech industry’s last shot, they got nothin’ after this. all of the government research from the 80s is used up and there is no next product

      • GrouchyGrouse [he/him]@hexbear.net
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        16 hours ago

        Warning: vibes based post

        So the way I see it the USA economy is propped up by 3 major legs: military, tech, and banking (real estate can be sorta folded into the banking category via a venn diagram).

        Despite the importance of the tech leg it is also the least stable because of how it has been pivoted toward wholly digital “products” like AI or crypto or internet platforms. Digital dvertising is in this weird quasi-real category in that you need a physical device (phone, TV etc) to see it and you (mostly) need a real end product to be selling (cars, medicines, etc) but as the rise of digital goods and services accelerates the products are slipping into the ether.

        So one of the major reasons that money is being dumped into tech is that it represents one of the only sectors where you can Winkle money out of thin air. You don’t need a bomb factory or a plot of land. That means it has a growth potential. But it’s just growth for the sake of growth. It doesn’t really translate into real world things like other industries. Like you said, this is one of their last shots because other than these specious digital products they aren’t making anything new. They’re innovating (wink!) within the narrow confines of technology that was laid out decades ago. There’s still progress being made, of course, but that real nuts and bolts R&D is now peripheral to the giant pump and dump scheme most tech is now operating on.

        What does all this mean? It means there is a definite shelf life to all this. It will stagnate. And when it does plateau it will collapse like a black hole because the “growing for the sake of growing” was all it had. Take that away and there’s nothing left behind the curtain. There will be no steady decline. The bubble will burst and it will be catastrophe.

      • stigsbandit34z [they/them]@hexbear.netOP
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        15 hours ago

        this shit is so expensive to run and if there’s no profitable use case it’ll crash sooner and harder than that

        It really seems like the powers that be find ways to keep things with no real life application going long past their time