Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Enric's avatar

Chess softwares are better at the game than any human, but we still play the game, and (top!) chess players still make money

Pawel Jozefiak's avatar

The 'cyborg' framing is more accurate than 'replacement.' What I'm seeing with my own agent setup is that the augmentation happens in weird, uneven ways - some tasks get 10x faster, others stay the same, and new tasks emerge that didn't exist before.

The labor market implications are harder to predict than people think. It's not just 'jobs lost vs. jobs created' - it's roles fragmenting and recombining in unexpected ways.

Has anyone seen good data on which specific task categories are actually being automated vs. augmented? Most studies aggregate at the job level, which misses the nuance.

62 more comments...

No posts

Ready for more?