I disagree with the author. Insights and opportunities to understand new technological developments increase every year. In the early years of these technologies, they were always less approchable to me. While in the 80s, I had to rely on outdated books from the library for superficial knowledge about PCs, now I can actively engage with AI developments in near real-time, experimenting with it as a service, running it on my own machine, or even training smaller models.
However, I am apprehensive about how society will navigate these new AI advancements. I believe we won't be able to adapt concepts and cultural techniques as quickly as the reality shifts due to ubiquitous AI. These social changes are beyond my comprehension and overwhelm me.
My engineering education has always helped me explain technology to both my parents and my children. But for now, it's just a matter of "fasten your seat belts."
However, I am apprehensive about how society will navigate these new AI advancements. I believe we won't be able to adapt concepts and cultural techniques as quickly as the reality shifts due to ubiquitous AI. These social changes are beyond my comprehension and overwhelm me.
My engineering education has always helped me explain technology to both my parents and my children. But for now, it's just a matter of "fasten your seat belts."