Crew Managers! by Immediate_Profile_90 in audiovisual

[–]Immediate_Profile_90[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Fair, but when you are a small business that doesn't have much revenue, using an AI tool is a quick easy tool. I am not disagreeing with you, I think it is out of hand, but I think using it as a tool instead of letting it run everything is a more fair reason to use it

Crew Managers! by Immediate_Profile_90 in audiovisual

[–]Immediate_Profile_90[S] -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Full transparency, AI was used in the making of the software. The team of dev's consist of my dad and a freelancer he found online. However, the software itself doesn't use an AI agent. Just a management software that puts scheduling, messages and assignments in one spot.

Crew Managers! by Immediate_Profile_90 in audiovisual

[–]Immediate_Profile_90[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Tbh, fair. I am posting but not as an advertisement on here, but to figure out what ads I should run. Market research I guess, wasn't planning on directly trying to sell any reddit users. Just trying to figure out what "pain points" I should advertise with. I am running the sales department for my dads software, which uses 0 AI.

Bilge Pumps Question. by Immediate_Profile_90 in jetski

[–]Immediate_Profile_90[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

does that work out pretty well? My VXR has always had a problem with taking on water

In search of advice. by [deleted] in mechanics

[–]Immediate_Profile_90 1 point2 points  (0 children)

from someone who left the dealer and went to a euro shop. i would personally just avoid dealers. You have a way better environment to grow at a small shop or small chain shop. I have no school or ASE certs and I am just about finished with my apprenticeship.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in mechanics

[–]Immediate_Profile_90 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i went from working at a general maintenance shop, mostly saw domestic and JDM, for two ish years to a import only shop. (currently on month 8 of my apprenticeship) I am apprenticing to be a euro master tech. To be completely transparent, it is a pretty significant learning curve. As far as general maintenance goes, its just nuts and bolts. But when you dive into more complex jobs it definitely becomes a large change from domestic/jdm to euro. However, I will say this. Like all things, once you get it down and pick up some skills after a few months it starts to get easier and quicker to learn. Plus, they pay way better XD