I was thinking about starting a new creative project recently. But then I thought - with how quickly AI is advancing, in just a few years an AI will probably be able to do this in just minutes. So it made me feel kind of apathetic and think, “Why should I bother starting this big project now if an AI could do it for me in a few years?”

I’m curious if others feel this way or if the advancement of AI is making people less motivated to start big, creative projects since the work could just be automated by an AI soon anyways. It could increase apathy and make people feel like “why bother?” Am I overthinking this? Does the possibility of AI taking over certain tasks in the future make you less motivated to start projects and learn new skills? Would love to hear others’ thoughts on this!

  • RightHandOfIkaros@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Physical game copies are only wanted by collectors

    I buy physical and I am not a game collector. I like to be able to lend my games to friends. Also, used game sales are impossible with digital. Publishers will never allow used digital sales because it eats away their precious profits.

    Bikes? Less and less.

    Not sure where you live, but where I live it seems the people and government want to outlaw all cars pretty soon and force everyone onto bikes or trains. Spend any amount of time on Reddit or even here on Lemmy and the users will not shut up about how cars are evil and bikes fix every problem of society.

    Manual transmissions?

    I’ve been a mechanic for more than 10 years at Hyundai, Kia, and Jaguar Land Rover dealerships. Manual transmission vehicles wwre pretty common, I would say it was about 45% manual transmissions and 55% automatic across the three. I also worked next to a Jeep dealer and they had manuals all the time.

    AI will take over. It will not be a bad thing. Human creativity will still exist and will always exist. People will always desire creativity from humans, even with the existence of AI tools.

    • Wrench Wizard@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      No one’s saying creativity will completely die, but experience tells me that when a function isn’t completely necessary, many people forget.

      When the internet came, libraries became less necessary.

      When print came, cursive became unnecessary.

      When kindles came, physical books lost value.

      We can be optimistic about it, but it will have an impact.

      Bad thing? Who knows. Major changes in life? Absolutely.

      It’ll make life easier, at the cost of losing certain skills we have, that’s how it’s been happening for a while now.

      Give a man a calculator, why would he do math in his head?

      Teach print, why write in cursive?

      Give me a library on my phone, why have a physical building?

      All of these things exist, sure, but to say that all change is positive is… not good. People make mistakes, not all modern advancements are for the good of humanity, or the individual.