I need to grow up and find a real career. What fields are in demand and wonโt dry out soon because of AI or outsourcing? Additional info is I prefer to work alone or at most a small group.
>>33242983 (OP)911 dispatcher.
They've already tested the AI one and it doesn't work. They also always want to have liability of an actual person and not a machine in all steps of emergency services.
>>33242983 (OP)This bitch still won't show her big fat titties on camera.
If you aren't going to be the CEO of something, your job is probably getting replaced by AI.
Tough luck kiddo.
automotive specifically service/collision repair
the manufacturer/dealer side might fall to ai but there are too many variables on the repair/service side
if literally anything interesting or weird is happening you are shit out of luck with google
just try to find a piece of paper or web page that tells you how to install the amg badge on a 2018 mercedes c43
Are you physical and in good health? Military and law enforcement are heavy in demand and light in applicants, and have been for decades. It's a shit job and you might get killed in an accident or intentionally, and the pay isn't that good either, but you do have job security. Even with all the AI moving into the field, boots are still needed on the ground. You may be alone or in a small group at times, but you'll be glad for the additional backup when you are in a larger group.
Are you good at helping people, have a clean legal record, and drug free? Nearly every jobs board IRL and on the internet is flooded with job postings for caretakers for the elderly. You need a nursing degree, but they aren't yet putting AI in caretaker jobs. Typically 1 on 1 work, but occasionally their family may be around.
Are you physically attractive or have an interesting/entertaining personality/life? E-celebs are raking in money for streaming everything from playing videogames to just talking to their viewers. AI streaming does exist(see ClaudePlaysPokemon), but it's still not nearly as popular as real people. You'll be alone, unless you count talking to people over the internet.
Are you drug free and have a clean driving record? They are trying to replace truck drivers with AI, but self-driving vehicles are going to be a fantasy as long as liability laws work the way they currently do. Gotta have a driver behind the wheel to hold responsible. It's long hours, and there's always the risk of a fatal accident on the road. Pay isn't amazing, and you'll be away from home in most cases. You'll be alone the majority of the time.
None of the above? Sorry, you're stuck in the customer service minimum wage mines with the rest of us. You might get lucky and stumble into something decent, but don't count on it.
>>33242983 (OP)AI, which is just a glorified search engine, will not wipe out entire professions. Rather, lower level jobs will be replaced with "smart" tools. So the attorney will be able to fire his secretary and have an AI spit out contracts, court submissions and other boilerplate; the eye surgeon, right now, can supervise several Lasik machines that correct focal range; the builder and the landscaper will have a team of robots doing the repetitive work on site; and so on. So plan a career path straight to the upper levels where human judgement and communication ability is required.
>>33243990Oh, I forgot a goodie from early in the last century: When traditional, manual typesetting was replaced with Linotype machines, with which one operator could produce the output of six traditional workers, there was much anguish over the possibility of unemployment. What happened instead is that within ten years the demand for printed products of all kinds increased so much, because of lower prices, that just as many skilled people were operating the new machines as had been employed before the machines came into use.
>>33244021My point being that when goods and services get cheaper then people buy more of them. If corrective eye surgery gets cheaper then more people will have it done. There will be AIs that replace hair one follicle at a time, inspect and fix tissues one cell at a time, supervised by the thousands by one human surgeon. As building and landscaping gets cheaper, the price of space habitats will come down and everyone will have to have one.
Cybersecurity. It's become quite a meme in many circles, but I can say without exaggeration there is not enough people in security given the fucked up state of the world.
And really you could go in a few directions with it if you have any cross-interests.
Programming and security go hand in hand and you can be a massive prospect if you know how to program in a secure way or fix security bugs.
Basic IT shit is easy to get into from a security perspective, granted you'll be just a ticket drone all day.
I myself work on the governance and risk management side which is fast tracking me to CIO/CISO territory.
I would caution against pentesting though. Unless you're really creative, that's generally going to become an AI shit hole in the very near future, plus very few regulations actually require penetration tests be performed for compliance purposes. Plus, for every SOC analyst, there's like 20 retards marketing themselves as a shit pentester.