Automation, and the threat of losing your job to it, have always been a fact of life. Artificial intelligence (AI) is likely to take over your job a piece at a time over the next few years, rather than all at once. Are you ready for that?
Some people are in denial of the risk that AI or robotics poses to their livelihoods, often because they have made at least one of the following mistakes in their thinking.
It seems as if all we’ve been talking about since Chat-GPT emerged into the public consciousness last autumn is the rise of artificial intelligence (AI) and how it may or may not be coming for our livelihoods. At the one extreme we have pessimists sharing their dire warnings of AIs coming to take our jobs away and at the other…
The project management profession, like many others, faces an emergent threat from artificial intelligence (AI)-based technologies. Project managers are likely to experience a major upheaval during the 2020s.
Professional writers are now using artificial intelligence (AI) in practice, and we can’t tell the difference.
We’re effectively in an arms race to apply AI to counteract other usage of AI.
Generative artificial intelligence (AI) is garnering a lot of attention these days. Although impressive, it isn’t perfect and as a result we run the risk of underestimating the potential impact of this swiftly improving environment.
First the AIs came for the artists, and I did not speak out – because I was not an artist. People deserve to be paid for both their work and their way of working (their style).
Artificial intelligence (AI) technologies are being used to potentially improve the recruitment/hiring process. What are they doing, why are they doing it, and what challenges are they running into?
To be considered for a job you need to write an effective resume, recognize that AI is likely being used to screen resumes, and apply AI to beat the AI.