Privatization of wildlife? Point creep? AI: “Hold my beer”

Pucky Freak

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 4, 2019
Messages
5,544
Location
Iowa
If 2023 was the dawn of the Age of AI, 2026 the Sun has crested the horizon. For those with their finger on the pulse of financial markets, the exponential increase in the capacity of AI, job displacement, and the flow of capital through the top AI tech companies from private equity is now observable month over month.

Large companies in finance, law, software, and customer service who piloted AI technologies in 2024 and 2025 are now making a sharp turn towards systemwide implementation, automating knowledge workflows in an unmistakable forward trend to stay competitive.

Day-to-day life for the vast majority of us on HT looks more or less the same as it always has. More likely than not in another year or two it will continue to, longer still in rural or remote places, and in local economies based on tangible goods and near-proximity services.

Nevertheless, there is a growing consensus among AI experts in academia, economics, tech, and political science that we are ushering in the largest technological revolution in human history, at breakneck speed. In 2040 the structure of America’s labor economy and resource distribution will be unrecognizable.

I encourage anyone who is interested in the subject to search for podcast interviews of top AI engineers, and Stanford, Yale, and Harvard professors who are heavily-involved in AI. Tristan Harris is also a good starting point - he’s been at the forefront of social media safety initiatives for over a decade, and has recently had pivoted towards advocating for the safe development of AI.

And no, I didn’t use a chatbot to create this post 😉

Ok, we’re hunters - what could this mean for us?? Some food for thought:

-Hunt NOW. Sure you will run out of health before you run out of money, but you run out of both if AI overlords wipe out the human race (considered by most experts to be about a 10-20% extinction risk).

-Stock up on AMMO. Supply chain woes were a PIA during the pandemic. Imagine how much worse it could be if there is a sudden major AI breakthrough or catastrophe (unlikely…but just in case)

-SHORT-term hunt plans. If labor becomes detached from resource distribution in 10-20 years, planning to cash in decades of PP/BP for an epic OIL hunt might not be on the menu…for anyone.

-LEGACY planning. I’m putting aside college savings for my 2-yr-old…but why? When he’s 35 y.o. 90% of jobs are going to be automated. I’m thinking about doubling down on quality time together, outdoor memories, and a focus on being present, human, connected. The skills needed for the future are wildly unpredictable right now, and knowledge is becoming a less-valuable commodity by the day.

Let’s see how well this post ages 😂😂
 
Hoping for a recession. In lieu of that, hoping simply fewer people have disposable income going forward.

I predict in 3-5 years, many hunts will be much more "drawable"
 
I call myself an electrician, but I spend over half of my time designing and programming industrial automation systems. AI will be my best friend if I never have to draw another schematic in AutoCAD again. ;)

I do struggle to see how the field work would be replaced by AI though.
 
I do struggle to see how the field work would be replaced by AI though.
Replace? No. But there will be a need for fewer of you. After the recent bid I got to run a new line in my house, I can also say there will be fewer people who will be able to pay for electrical work if the prices don't come down. ;)

Can't wait for the shootouts at Walmart over toilet paper.
 
Replace? No. But there will be a need for fewer of you. After the recent bid I got to run a new line in my house, I can also say there will be fewer people who will be able to pay for electrical work if the prices don't come down. ;)
Really? If you can't do the work yourself, tradesman have to do it. Regardless of cost. mtmuley
 
Really, not having work isn't really what worries me about AI - its the surveillance state were being forced to live in. We walk around with a recording device in our pocket so these data centers know EVERYTHING about us. We've all had the conversation about a product and that night your getting advertisements for it...
 
Can’t wait to see AI tradesmen!
I fixed my wife’s engine with Gemini a month ago. This summer I’m hiring Claude for $20 a month to help me swap out my entire coolant system on my truck. I’m not a mechanic. It isn’t a robot plumber that takes over. It’s a smartphone that walks the homeowner through easily doing it themselves, or some do-it-all service person with a total education of 1 month of how to use the comprehensive home repair app.
 
I fixed my wife’s engine with Gemini a month ago. This summer I’m hiring Claude for $20 a month to help me swap out my entire coolant system on my truck. I’m not a mechanic. It isn’t a robot plumber that takes over. It’s a smartphone that walks the homeowner through easily doing it themselves, or some do-it-all service person with a total education of 1 month of how to use the comprehensive home repair app.
I think enterprising people that are willing to attempt stuff themselves have already been using the Internet for such things. They’re just gonna get better at it. People who aren’t using the Internet to do that already aren’t going to use AI to do it.
 
I fixed my wife’s engine with Gemini a month ago. This summer I’m hiring Claude for $20 a month to help me swap out my entire coolant system on my truck. I’m not a mechanic. It isn’t a robot plumber that takes over. It’s a smartphone that walks the homeowner through easily doing it themselves, or some do-it-all service person with a total education of 1 month of how to use the comprehensive home repair app.
Most of that is likely available on YouTube for free.
 
I think enterprising people that are willing to attempt stuff themselves have already been using the Internet for such things. They’re just gonna get better at it. People who aren’t using the Internet to do that already aren’t going to use AI to do it.
AI will make experts out of everyone. Funny. mtmuley
 
I do struggle to see how the field work would be replaced by AI though.
Take a ride in a robotaxi. Then consider how far phones have come in 20 years. If a robotaxi can take me across Austin better than an actual driver, I can easily see the technology advancing enough to do most field work.
I predict in 3-5 years, many hunts will be much more "drawable"
Based on what? I mean, I hope you're right, but I don't see it.
 
Chat will also tell you to align your wheel studs with the "relief notch" except there isn't one on my car, when you point that out, it'll tell you it might take a small grinder if the clearance is tight.

Not today Chat, I'm not grinding my wheel hubs, that sounds like how you win a Darwin Award.
 
Based on what? I mean, I hope you're right, but I don't see it.
Economic recession. Take NR elk tags in Idaho. The demand for them has ebbed and flowed several time over the last 30 years, from selling out to having surplus tags available. Nothing is forever, even if it feels that way right now.
 
Back
Top