AI Is Taking Over Accounting Jobs
For white-collar workers, there is a looming fear that artificial intelligence will steal their jobs. Puzzle is trying to just that.
For white-collar workers, there is a looming fear that artificial intelligence will steal their jobs. Puzzle is trying to just that.
Intriguingly, new research suggests that large-scale consumer demand drives technological innovation. Inventions are not just supplied by bright people thinking outside the box, but in response to clear societal needs.
Tech jobs and stocks are up, layoffs are down, and the first AI software engineer is spooking tech workers - all while there's a 60% chance of a broad recession.
For many young professionals, the hybrid IT work model offers the best of both worlds. LinkedIn’s latest Workforce Confidence Index, a bi-weekly survey of over 17,000 professionals, showed that just 39% of employees in the U.S. would prefer to work onsite all the time.
How will AI impact creativity, consumer engagement, and visual storytelling? Like so many aspects of AI, this one is provoking excitement and anxiety in equal parts.
In a 2019 documentary on the future of work by Vice News, a graying truck driver talks about how proud he is of his work. "I know I'm providing the world with whatever I've got in my freight," he says. "I deliver your clothes, your food. It's a good feeling as a driver, as a human being."
The sudden arrival of generative artificial intelligence (AI) tools such as ChatGPT and Midjourney has got millions of workers wondering how their jobs and livelihoods might be impacted. While AI is currently dominating the headlines, other technology shifts are going on in the background that will also have a major influence on how we work in the future.