Comment by skydhash
1 day ago
4) People that likes having reliable tools which frees them from "reviewing" the output of these tools to see if the tool didn't make an error.
Using AI is like driving a car that decides to turn even if you keep the steering wheel straight. Randomly. At various degree. If you like this because some times it let you turn in a curve without you having to steer, you do you. But some people do prefer having a car turn when and only when they turn the wheel.
That's covered under point #1. I'm not claiming these tools are perfect. Neither are most people, but from the standpoint of an employer, the question is going to be "does the tool, after accounting for errors, make my employees more or less productive?" A lot of people are seeing the answer to that - today - is the tools offer a productivity advantage.