The overwhelming majority of those claiming the opposite are a mixture of:
- users with wrong expectations, such as AI's ability to do the job on its own with minimal effort from the user. They have marketers to blame.
- users that have AI skill issues: they simply don't understand/know how to use the tools appropriately. I could provide countless examples from the importance of quality prompting, good guidelines, context management, and many others. They have only their laziness or lack of interest to blame.
- users that are very defensive about their job/skills. Many feel threatened by AI taking their jobs or diminishing it, so their default stance is negative. They have their ego to blame.
The overwhelming majority of those claiming the opposite are a mixture of:
- users with wrong expectations, such as AI's ability to do the job on its own with minimal effort from the user. They have marketers to blame.
- users that have AI skill issues: they simply don't understand/know how to use the tools appropriately. I could provide countless examples from the importance of quality prompting, good guidelines, context management, and many others. They have only their laziness or lack of interest to blame.
- users that are very defensive about their job/skills. Many feel threatened by AI taking their jobs or diminishing it, so their default stance is negative. They have their ego to blame.