AI is reshaping the workplace faster than most anticipated. Two sectors stand out as early success stories: computer programming and customer service. Why have these fields become testing grounds for automation? The patterns emerging here might reveal which jobs are next in line for transformation.
Developers already rely on AI assistants to write boilerplate code, debug errors, and suggest optimizations. Customer service teams deploy chatbots handling routine inquiries at scale. Both areas share common traits—structured tasks, clear inputs and outputs, massive training data availability.
But here's the thing: if AI conquered these spaces, what's stopping it from moving into yours? The implications stretch far beyond tech offices and call centers. Understanding why these sectors fell first could help predict where automation heads next.
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LayerZeroHero
· 10h ago
To be honest, as a programmer, this makes me a bit anxious... ChatGPT writes code much faster than I do, and now I have to learn to work with AI just to make a living.
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SchroedingerGas
· 10h ago
Damn, programmers are really about to get laid off. I was hoping to coast a few more years writing code 😅
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FlashLoanLord
· 10h ago
Developers have all been tamed by AI, so we're probably next, haha.
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MEVHunterNoLoss
· 11h ago
Haha, developers have indeed been squeezed dry, now it's customer service's turn, and next is... wait, will it be writers' turn?
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PoetryOnChain
· 11h ago
Haha, I'm now competing with ChatGPT for work every day... I feel like I'm about to become redundant.
AI is reshaping the workplace faster than most anticipated. Two sectors stand out as early success stories: computer programming and customer service. Why have these fields become testing grounds for automation? The patterns emerging here might reveal which jobs are next in line for transformation.
Developers already rely on AI assistants to write boilerplate code, debug errors, and suggest optimizations. Customer service teams deploy chatbots handling routine inquiries at scale. Both areas share common traits—structured tasks, clear inputs and outputs, massive training data availability.
But here's the thing: if AI conquered these spaces, what's stopping it from moving into yours? The implications stretch far beyond tech offices and call centers. Understanding why these sectors fell first could help predict where automation heads next.