this post was submitted on 19 Jun 2026
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Reliance on artificial-intelligence tools degrades the abilities of physicians and software engineers, studies show.

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[–] deliriousdreams@fedia.io 7 points 15 hours ago (1 children)

Ok, there are definitely a lot of trades where things are still taught by hand in the event that you have to do them by hand some day. Doing it by hand does more than just re-enforce knowledge. It also teaches you new things and allows a process, and the space to re-evaluate and innovate. We improve by doing those things by hand. That is very often worth the cost. You very often don't get things quickly, cheaply, and with quality. The AI will degrade if we don't provide it with quality information to work with. It is nothing without our skills. We won't have those skills if we don't use them.

You talk like a businessman rather than an artisan or a creator of things, so perhaps your mindset is different but what happens when the AI breaks something and nobody can fix it because they lack the ability to think about the problem constructively or understand what the problem actually is.

[–] FaceDeer@fedia.io -3 points 15 hours ago (1 children)

As I said, I can write programs in assembly language. I have actually done so, small trivial ones. I'm not a businessman, I'm a programmer. But I use compilers basically all the time because it would be ridiculous not to.

If an AI is able to break something in a way that no human can fix then I suppose that's a sign that AI has exceeded human capabilities. Do you think it's there yet?

[–] mabeledo@lemmy.world 4 points 5 hours ago (1 children)

“Exceeding human capabilities” is not always a good thing.

But anyway, the compiler analogy doesn’t work. Compilers aren’t statistical machines.

[–] FaceDeer@fedia.io 0 points 5 hours ago (1 children)

Neither are forklifts. It's an analogy, not exactly the same thing.

[–] mabeledo@lemmy.world 3 points 5 hours ago

Yeah, the forklift analogy doesn’t work either.