The O*net papers are great, but they don鈥檛 tell us how jobs will change.
This is such an interesting thread, and a lightning tour of what advanced manufacturing tools look like today, from industrial robots to lasers. (As a side note, this is also very old-school, now mostly lost, Twitter, where experts put together long threads on narrow topics)
Three hints to the future of AI in this paper: 1) It is close to outperforming the top humans at geometry (superhuman performance is possible) 2) It combines a language model & other AI approaches (hints of the value of tools) 3) It trained on AI-generated data (big for training)
The first outbreak of the Plague, the 541 Plague of Justinian, was thought to have effectively ended the Roman Empire & killed over 1/3 of Europe. But new historical work hasn鈥檛 found strong evidence for large-scale disease. (But the debate continues)
A 2021 paper finds teaching with AI-generated historical figures can aid learning: [link] This is now easy. Based on his voice, here is simulated F. Scott Fitzgerald reading the end of The Great Gatsby. Is it too creepy? (Yet... cartoon Einsteins are everywhere)