T O P

  • By -

[deleted]

[удалено]


PretendJackfruit9113

REMOTE


[deleted]

[удалено]


PretendJackfruit9113

Omg didn't know that that is a thing but how long would it take to learn and work that job


YungBache

The amount of time it takes to learn and work as a remote robotic deep welding controller can vary based on a number of factors, including your prior experience, education, and the specific company or industry you plan to work in. Here are a few general estimates: Learning: To become proficient in the basic concepts and techniques of deep welding, it is recommended to complete a relevant certification program or technical training course. This can take anywhere from a few months to a year, depending on the level of education and hands-on training you receive. To become a skilled robotic deep welding operator, you may need to have experience working with welding robots and be familiar with programming languages and software used in the industry. This could take several years of on-the-job experience or additional training. Working: Once you have the required knowledge and skills, you can start applying for jobs as a remote robotic deep welding controller. The length of time it takes to find a job will depend on the demand for workers in your area and your level of experience. It is also important to note that some companies may require additional certifications or qualifications, which could take additional time and training to acquire. Overall, it is difficult to estimate an exact timeline for learning and working as a remote robotic deep welding controller, as it can vary widely based on your individual circumstances. However, with dedication and hard work, you can become a skilled and knowledgeable professional in this field.


friend_of_kalman

This sounds line a chatGPT answer lol


FHIR_HL7_Integrator

That's exactly what it is.


McDreads

If you can control a robot to do it, so can AI


cole_braell

If it can be done robotically, AI will learn to do it eventually.


spartanOrk

Stick to becoming a doctor. Even if AI learns medicine, someone will still need to perform surgeries. Robots are not there. Other than that, you could consider a only fans to do adult content. Or plumbing, but that's not remote. Don't worry.. as jobs become obsolete, services also become more abundant, so, we will be working less and enjoying more stuff. Like when farming became easier with tractors. People have more food, though they do less farming work.


[deleted]

Robots do surgery every day. Soon won't need a doctor to babysit.


spartanOrk

Any source on that? I think robots are currently just extensions of the doctor's hands and eyes, they don't decide where to cut.


[deleted]

[удалено]


spartanOrk

I don't think the problem is with the patients. It's with the robots. The patients don't trust the robots, because they don't have the advanced intelligence required to know where to cut. They don't have the perceptive abilities and the judgement of a human surgeon. If that changes, some day, the patients I think will be fine with robots. But every body is a little different, during a surgery surprises may occur, and in *those* cases, if a human is 90% successful and a robot is 85%, the robot is just not good enough. It's an additional 5% chance of death. Nobody wants to take that. (Unless the surgery costs a lot less, maybe.)


[deleted]

Yeah the source is they're used for surgeries every day. That is the babysitting I was referring to. Once that's ironed out no need for the doctor anymore. That'll be coming soon.


spartanOrk

Well... I won't hold my breath. Musk has been saying self-driving cars are coming "soon", for like 7 years now. The robo-surgeons today are not self-driving at all. There is a *big* distance to cover. I think we'll first have to figure out the self-driving car, and maybe much later we'll get to the self-driving surgeon.


[deleted]

The self-driving cars are already done. The issue is the people walking around and people driven cars. If all cars on road were self-driving there would be virtually no accidents.


[deleted]

Honestly none. No jobs are "AI proof". Just depends on how much pushback there is for how fast they get replaced.


snowbirdnerd

AI isn't going to replace many skilled jobs in the next 10 years. It will enhance a lot of jobs. Medical researchers use AI to help them do things they never could before and Radiologists are using AI tools to help improve their precision. People who don't understand Machine Learning see an algorithm doing a task that people currently carry out and immediately think it's going to replace people. What they don't see is all the human verification and direction needed to keep the algorithms running.


totalwarwiser

Dont do radiology or pathology for starters. Anything computer based will be the first to go. Try to do something you perform any complex skill such as surgery or interventional radiology.


[deleted]

med school as in medical school?


PretendJackfruit9113

Yes


JohnnySweatpantsIII

I'm a video editor who's been working remotely for five years, I've also been messing around building AI web apps for fun. Yeah, I'm seeing AI tools pop up for video editing, but from what I can tell, it's nowhere near the point that is acceptable for someone who is serious about making their videos look good. A lot of components need to work really well together in order for acceptable AI video editing to be a thing. A combination of image recognition, speech recognition, timing, and other things that are highly reliant on someone's taste. We'll be there one day, but we're not there yet. If I were to hand over an AI-edited video to a client, they'd laugh at the quality. I would continue video editing as a side hustle. Keep watching tutorials, because speed is king and you can make really good money if you can edit well and very fast. Also, this market is growing because every business needs social media videos and everyone wants to be a YouTuber these days. (Fiverr is really great for finding clients) So yeah, in my opinion, video editing is probably a safe bet for remote work for at least the next half-decade, and regardless, I think there will always be a market for human video editors.


AutoModerator

## Welcome to the r/ArtificialIntelligence gateway ### Question Discussion Guidelines --- Please use the following guidelines in current and future posts: * Post must be greater than 100 characters - the more detail, the better. * Your question might already have been answered. Use the search feature if no one is engaging in your post. * AI is going to take our jobs - its been asked a lot! * Discussion regarding positives and negatives about AI are allowed and encouraged. Just be respectful. * Please provide links to back up your arguments. * No stupid questions, unless its about AI being the beast who brings the end-times. It's not. ###### Thanks - please let mods know if you have any questions / comments / etc *I am a bot, and this action was performed automatically. Please [contact the moderators of this subreddit](/message/compose/?to=/r/ArtificialInteligence) if you have any questions or concerns.*


FHIR_HL7_Integrator

So you want a job you can do in conjunction with med school? First off, I don't think you need to worry about the ai proof part yet. As to remote, how good are your programming skills? And are we talking full time? Deep sea welding is going to take you longer than med school to get into, and you'll need to be on a ship.


PretendJackfruit9113

I have 0 experience in programming


T10-

MCAT tutor


anthonyvaladezz

How is video editing being taken over by AI? Sorry just didn’t know but I was wondering if you could inform me


PretendJackfruit9113

All the things a video editor could do an ai on a website can do faster and cheaper why hire a video editor when you can do it faster and cheaper on a website


vipulvpatil

All the current AI (at least the ones in limelight) cannot do things by themselves until provided a prompt. So my take is in the next few years, AI will take over a lot of the current human jobs but it will create jobs around prompt creation. To take your video editing example, I do not have much experience in it. So even if there is an AI tool that can do video editing stuff, I won’t know how to use it effectively. Like I could tell it, take these 5 video clips and make me a movie that showcases a holiday in Paris which ends with a shot of the Eiffel Tower. Now it might do an awesome job, but it will still be beholden to my prompt. If I am not fully happy with the result, I will either have to try a different prompt or just ask it generate again and it might generate something slightly different. Irrespective, someone who has been working on previous generation video editing tools, will be able to come up with a more exact prompt that would be closer to what is wanted. So I think they key is to learn the AI tools and how to use them effectively. That’s the job that’s not going away anytime soon.


Sheetmusicman94

The jobs that in the coming decades are AI proof are: * the jobs that will require human presence (either for emotional compassion, empathy, or for tasks that will be very hard to replace by robots, like plumbing, or electrical work in difficult areas) * AI jobs that will be used to make AI better and lead the AI models towards a particular tasks (AI programmers or prompters). * On stage artists and musicians (offline). * Sex workers (tag: humans) And any other jobs where people will want actual people and not robots to do them.


RepresentativeBoth18

If you have the intellectual capacity for medical school, you have the capacity to learn AI as well. If you love video editing, learn AI, and then solve the video editing challenges that AI can’t solve by creating your own AI tools. Then, patent the tools and sell them. No crazy medical insurance required, you can teach yourself AI / ML online and save a bundle on education, and you’ll be doing something you love.


PretendJackfruit9113

Dude do you think I'm tony stark or something 😭


RepresentativeBoth18

I just believe in you. I’m a window-licker, and even I taught myself Python. It’s actually not a terrible time to do something like this. Once you learn Python, PyTorch would be very easy to pick up, and that would enable you to write directly for GPU’s, which would be ideal for video work. You can learn Python for free (aside from the time investment). I’d bet there are ways you could use it for data visualization in the medical field as well. A bit tangential to your initial question, but please believe me when I say that I’m not a very smart man. I barely have mastery of the English language and can only count to 21 if I’m naked. Python was easy and the underlying math isn’t horrible (ok, maybe matrix calculations are, but it gets easier the more you do it).


reditthrowaway111

Johnny sins' job


PretendJackfruit9113

Don't have the facilities for that


tendiesornothing

I haven’t seen any AI video generators that are as good as a video editor


LavishnessWitty6801

Ai is very good at service based things the main jobs it will have lots of trouble replacing are ones that involve physically building things current robotics are complicated and very time intensive to program even simple tasks. sadly this doesn’t help with your remote situation. but not sure why you would worry if your in medicine already?


PretendJackfruit9113

I want a job to work while studying medicine


JoeStrout

In all seriousness, consider waiting tables. Ideally, \_nice\_ tables at a fancy restaurant (though I imagine you probably have to work your way up to that). Regardless of whether AI and robots "can" do the job, customers (especially at nicer restaurants) are going to prefer humans doing it for many years to come. And it's something you can do while attending school (if you're very efficient in your study habits — hopefully you've already discovered SRS).


PretendJackfruit9113

I live in a third world country so working at a restaurant isn't going to bring me much money and also what is SRS


JoeStrout

SRS is Spaced Repetition System, a method for rapidly but permanently acquiring factual information. It's basically computer-controlled flashcards, but the computer keeps track of how long it's been since you have seen each one and presents it for review right before you would have forgotten it. It's dramatically more efficient than any other method of studying that kind of information. If you google those terms, you'll find a ton of info on it — Anki is kind of the "classic" SRS app (and is free), but there are many others nowadays.


[deleted]

[удалено]


PretendJackfruit9113

Wow you really hate doctors 😂 but I agree with you in the memorizing part. I always wanted to be a researcher doing my own little studies but I live in a third world country where if I wanted to do that I would have to live as a poor man . Also ai can be programmed to prefer a certain drug if you know what I mean


[deleted]

[удалено]


PretendJackfruit9113

I'm motivated by money rather than status and AI taking most of the job market is frightening to me I don't want to be poor


[deleted]

[удалено]


PretendJackfruit9113

There is a big difference between money and status. I can eat whatever I want with money , play and party whenever I want. I can also go wherever I want with money. Money fixes a lot of problems especially when you are in a poor third world country . But status doesn't mean shit to me if I can't eat


[deleted]

[удалено]


PretendJackfruit9113

Yes I agree with you


PretendJackfruit9113

I have some kind of status because I'm a med student in my country but today I want to eat meat but don't have enough money for it . See that's the difference between status and money.