The Coming Divide: AI-Native or Left Behind

(danielmiessler.com)

3 points | by skeledrew 2 hours ago

3 comments

  • thatoneengineer 34 minutes ago
    I'm an early adopter of AI products myself, but I'm always disgusted when I hear this kind of case being made for them. It's fear-mongering, plain and simple. The cloud, mobile, even crypto sounded like "join us in this exciting new world" at their most hyped. Why does AI so often sound like "get on board or you'll be obsolete"?

    If the author really is right, that we're heading for a world with a cutthroat binary divide between the adopters and the non-adopters, then I know in my gut which side I want to be on, and it's not his.

  • robin_reala 1 hour ago
    Given the outsourcing of thinking, I’d argue that the author has got their book analogy the wrong way around.
  • jazz9k 1 hour ago
    "Talking to someone who reads 20–50 good books a year is nothing like talking to someone who hasn't read a book since school made them."

    Most books are outdated, before they are released.

    I read well over the amount text in 20-30 books from online content/non-books.

    This idea is outdated and not a good indicator of someone who reads.

    AI is just a tool. It's pretty obvious it's here to stay and if you don't start embracing it, you will be left behind.

    • BigTTYGothGF 1 hour ago
      > Most books are outdated, before they are released

      What an odd thing to say.