You might be thinking, "But Chad, what about the risks of becoming dependent on AI?"
I guess we're already dependent on Google, which is technically based off AI too, in our daily lives and even work. It's already acceptable to "hang on, let me Google it" when someone isn't sure about something in a professional context. Very soon, and increasingly in certain more open-minded industries, it'd be entirely acceptable to "hang on, let me ask [insert AI model by big tech or even your own coded AI agent based off another model, eg. Chibi]".
The question would be "what about the risks of not using AI at all and get left behind?", like those who were adamant about using horses as a mode of transport and refusing to take a motor vehicle.
You might be thinking, "But Chad, what about the risks of becoming dependent on AI?"
I guess we're already dependent on Google, which is technically based off AI too, in our daily lives and even work. It's already acceptable to "hang on, let me Google it" when someone isn't sure about something in a professional context. Very soon, and increasingly in certain more open-minded industries, it'd be entirely acceptable to "hang on, let me ask [insert AI model by big tech or even your own coded AI agent based off another model, eg. Chibi]".
The question would be "what about the risks of not using AI at all and get left behind?", like those who were adamant about using horses as a mode of transport and refusing to take a motor vehicle.
You’re absolutely right.
Every tech cycle goes through something like this. I’m hoping Chibi can be the middle ground.
Where we help those who want the help, but will write for themselves. The AI will be there to analyze, bounce ideas off of, etc.
And others who want to craft interesting tools that perform the repetitive actions they commonly do.
There is a wide middle between “I won’t use AI at all! and “I want to automate everything.”
Everyone will find their place.