Ok, I’ll bite—show me three jobs where this is true.
That’s all, just three jobs. Cite the study/data where this has been proven.
That’s all, just three jobs. Cite the study/data where this has been proven.
Reposted from
Mark Cuban
If you have zero education, but learn how to ask AI models the right questions , in many jobs you will be able to outperform someone with an advanced degree, but who is unwilling to use Large Language Models.
Just takes a smartphone, curiosity to experiment and a mindset to learn.
Just takes a smartphone, curiosity to experiment and a mindset to learn.
Comments
They also protect your privacy - they don’t track your searches.
Way to save the planet, Mark!
Vice-President
Head of DOGE
You still have to study, for me early on it was the library, then later online courses.
But idk about the original premise pitched—someone w/out *any training* + an LLM outperforming someone w/ an advanced degree. I’m skeptical.
Someone w/out a degree outperforming someone w/ multiple degrees…that’s a common occurrence 😂
TBH, I doubt he really read my post—why would he? 😂
Again, I’m open to being wrong, but I would really like to see evidence where an untrained worker + an LLM outperformed someone with an advanced degree if it’s true.
If the original post was about bachelor’s degrees, it makes a little more sense; though I’d still love to see some data.
AI is literally my Chegg account for when I'm stumped and can't solve the issue on my own
To be fair, if it’s half as good but costs 60% less, the option is still probably being looked at.
Genuinely no idea how that group would fit in to the study.
But like, don’t replace the civil engineer designing a bridge with a chef and a ChatGPT license 😂
And, conceptually, the tech is interesting despite its many flaws.
But it can’t be endless marketing statements. If it’s this revolutionary, at some point there has to be some hard evidence.
But I’m a little confused—do virtual assistants usually have advanced degrees? I assumed it would only require up to a bachelors degree, but I’m not very familiar with the field TBH.
If you aren't an expert ina field, you aren't qualified to write prompts to get the information you need.
I have entry levwl employees outperforming 30 year veterans, because the veterans won't use AI.
I’m most interested if the job is super specialized.
The Internet has democratized many things, for example:
- Commerce
- Education
- Journalism
Just to name a few
Commerce - see platforms like Ebay and Etsy, anyone can make and sell products with traditional barriers gone
Education - Widely available / affordable online. incl. accredited courses