Ask HN: What skills are future proof in an AI driven job market?
Posted by sunny678 3 hours ago
For developers and non-developers alike: What's worth learning today to stay relevant in an AI first world
Comments
Comment by 10keane 2 minutes ago
management - it occured to me that giving instructions to agent is very similar to giving instructions to human employees - even the best of them make mistakes.
i learnt that asking claude code to "investigate for 3 potential root causes" is more effective than "investigate the root cause" in bug fix. this blows my mind as i realize that agent can be lazy, can be careless, and we can give better instruction to prevent that.
another reason why i said this is that giving enough context and defining blast boundary is more efficient than hand-holding/micromanaging and checking every tool call for agents. the management skill for human employees also works here.
critical thinking - you just need to have your judgement on the seemingly solid but actually halluncinated agent bs.
Comment by kimhjo 39 minutes ago
Comment by Areena_28 2 hours ago
Also, deep domain knowledge is the other one..... knowing what good output looks like in your field is something models can't fake convincingly at the edges.
Comment by fiftyacorn 1 hour ago
Comment by sunny678 1 hour ago
Comment by Ashbt 2 hours ago
Comment by sunny678 1 hour ago
Comment by alegd 2 hours ago
also just understanding how the models work. I'm doing an AI masters right now and once you know whats happening under the hood the anxiety disappears.
bottom line: learn it and embrace it.
Comment by phillc73 3 hours ago
Comment by sunny678 2 hours ago
Comment by phillc73 1 hour ago
As examples, check out:
Cosinuss: https://www.cosinuss.com/en/
Medictool: https://www.medic-tool.com/
LifesaverSim: https://www.lifesaversim.com/
Comment by cal_dent 2 hours ago
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Comment by nicbou 15 minutes ago
Comment by bayarearefugee 2 hours ago
If they haven't and we have hit the exponential growth mark, nothing is safe and even the temporarily "safe jobs" will also suffer greatly from being crunched on both the supply and demand sides (there will be more labor supply for those jobs as the displaced try to flee to safe jobs, there will be less demand for the output of those jobs because the displaced will no longer have income to pay for those goods or services). And LLMs and robots will eventually come for many of those jobs too, likely at a rate that exceeds people's ability to retrain.
Better hope that either things have peaked, or that we can somehow manage to stop treating all forms of socialism as evil or we're going to see the violent unmaking of modern society in our lifetimes.
Comment by KetoManx64 3 hours ago
Comment by Areena_28 2 hours ago
Comment by zhouzhao 2 hours ago
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Comment by cantrevealname 2 hours ago
The only significant barrier is that it's not condoned by the medical establishment and by law (which I imagine will indeed take a few years to work around).
Comment by fabulousman 3 hours ago
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Comment by num42 3 hours ago
As people often say, matter, energy, and information are the fundamentals of everything. I think we need mathematics, analytic philosophy, the arts and humanities, and physics too. Sorry we need every skill. /s