oh, there won't be another chance?
You had your chance to cast him down and you failed right thru this last election cycle.
oh, there won't be another chance?
so much for learning to code
https://sfstandard.com/2025/02/27/sa...s-tech-agents/It’s official: AI is gobbling up engineering jobs on tech’s native turf.
CEO Marc Benioff said Salesforce, San Francisco’s largest private employer, does not plan to hire engineers this year because of the success of AI agents created and used by the company.
“My message to CEOs right now is that we are the last generation to manage only humans,” Benioff said Wednesday on Salesforce’s earnings call, indicating that companies of the future will have hybrid human and digital workforces.
Only for the next 4 years. After that, no matter who is elected we will revert to the SOP that you love so much. But for these 4 years I'm going to enjoy myself immensely & thoroughly.
This.is.it.
WE WANT Y'ALL TO WORK OVERTIME TO TRAIN YOUR REPLACEMENTS
Https://gizmodo.com/googles-sergey-b...hem-2000570025Google co-founder Sergey Brin has told engineers at the tech giant that they should return to the office five days a week to help improve AI models that could ultimately replicate their work. The reclusive billionaire himself started returning to Mountain View following the launch of ChatGPT, which left Google on its back foot and raised concerns the company had fallen behind in a nascent field that had been developed within its own walls but was commercialized by OpenAI.
Brin—who is worth an estimated $144 billion and still owns a single-digit percent of Google shares—is trying to instill more urgency amongst employees, telling other Googlers working on AI that they must pick up the pace if they are going to win against the likes of OpenAI and Microsoft.
“Compe ion has accelerated immensely and the final race to A.G.I. is afoot,” he wrote in a memo seen by The New York Times that was directed at engineers working on Gemini, the name for its AI models and apps. “I think we have all the ingredients to win this race, but we are going to have to turbocharge our efforts.” He added that “60 hours a week is the sweet spot of productivity.”
Brin wrote that engineers should use Google’s own AI models to help write their code, saying doing so will make them “the most efficient coders and A.I. scientists in the world.”
El0n really thinks he can replace civil servants with a chatbot
https://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2025...orruption.htmlAccording to Wired, DOGE has given about 1,500 employees at the US General Services Administration, the agency that manages federal real estate and oversees most government contracts, access to a proprietary chatbot called GSAi. That’s right, the agency that has alreadylost hundreds of employees to termination or resignation, including basically everyone working at its extremely efficient tech hub known as 18F, is getting ChatGPT in a suit that matches federal dress code to make up for all that lost labor.
GSAi, which was apparently rushed out the door by DOGE with the intention of deploying it across the entire agency, is supposed to support staff with “general” tasks. In an internal memo obtained by Wired, GSA employees were told that when it comes to what they can use GSAi for, “the options are endless.” It then offered a list of tasks that, frankly, ended very quickly: “You can: draft emails, create talking points, summarize text, write code.”
Those chatbots had not been deployed on account of being “janky,” per one employee. So, of course, DOGE just went ahead and rolled that thing out to people. Also, it seemed like the intention of those projects were to build a tool that could help facilitate employee work, not replace thousands of staff who were abruptly cut. In the case of the GSA, it’s likely that at least some of the people let go are the very ones who were building the GSAi tool that is now being deployed in their wake. Something tells me their skills are more useful than a chatbot that can draft an email.
"your petty emphasis on laws, rights and personal privacy are interfering with my plans to steal your data and eliminate your job"
https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/...race-to-china/"The federal government can both secure Americans’ freedom to learn from AI and avoid forfeiting our AI lead to the PRC by preserving American AI models’ ability to learn from copyrighted material," OpenAI said.
is AI the wave of the future because it's factually unreliable?
I wonder which AI El0n is using for his government purges and censorship
in a hilarious twist, subscription AI did worse than free AI
https://arstechnica.com/ai/2025/03/a...te-study-says/A new study from Columbia Journalism Review's Tow Center for Digital Journalism finds serious accuracy issues with generative AI models used for news searches. The research tested eight AI-driven search tools equipped with live search functionality and discovered that the AI models incorrectly answered more than 60 percent of queries about news sources.
Researchers Klaudia Jaźwińska and Aisvarya Chandrasekar noted in their report that roughly 1 in 4 Americans now use AI models as alternatives to traditional search engines. This raises serious concerns about reliability, given the substantial error rate uncovered in the study.
Error rates varied notably among the tested platforms. Perplexity provided incorrect information in 37 percent of the queries tested, whereas ChatGPT Search incorrectly identified 67 percent (134 out of 200) of articles queried. Grok 3 demonstrated the highest error rate, at 94 percent.
this is what El0n/Trump want to replace the civil service with?
Of course, old horse. That's part of the equation...money to be made because the "wave" will be unreliable, most likely horribly so.
You can't stop the future old man
and it isn't all about Elon
He's behind the curve atm tbh
What is it about?
the future I says
Which means what?
like VR and the Metaverse
you know, the future
I don't know about the future, but this is the present
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Tesla’s CEO, Elon Musk, has unveiled plans to diversify the company’s portfolio by venturing into humanoid robotics. The Optimus robot, designed to perform tasks traditionally handled by humans, represents Tesla’s commitment to innovation beyond the automotive industry. The company aims to produce 5,000 units in 2025, with aspirations to scale up production to 50,000 units in 2026. Musk envisions that these robots will not only enhance productivity but also become a significant revenue stream for Tesla in the coming years.
Seems overly ambitious but certainly the future is coming fast. Probably by the end of next decade, we're going to need a new 'ism.
the demo for Optimus featured a remote human controller
El0n promised us self-driving cars too, is that a decade or two away as well?
Nah, this will just fail like most of his other ventures that aren't propped up by the federal government.
That's how they train them
Not two
Tesla's first robotaxi service will start in Austin, Texas, in June, according to CEO Elon Musk.
https://www.businessinsider.com/elon...in-june-2025-1
Tesla moved one step closer to its goal of operating a fleet of autonomous robotaxis on Tuesday when California regulators granted Elon Musk’s electric car maker a license to begin offering rides in the state.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/comp...ck/ar-AA1Bg8yd
Elon may fail...he's got a lot of compe ion in that space. I told you he's behind the curve imo.
Still, you can't stop the future
Elon can't even operate a car service on a 1.7 mile closed track without drivers.
they weren't upfront about that
menace to public safety, I'll never get in one
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