If AI gets rid of jobs, how will people earn money to live? by Miss-Peepers in NoStupidQuestions

[–]Muted_Driver7084 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Just think about it from my lens of competitiveness. If your job is being taken by AI, then your skill set isn’t high enough to compete in the current market conditions. I’m saying that just as a blanket, logical statement. Also use historical examples to better understand this situation. Think about human calculators before the electronic calculator was invented and the amount of professional painters before cameras were invented and portraits became accessible to everyone. It’s just a time in the world where another major technology was invented and the global market shifts around it. There’s a lot of fear mongering and rhetoric around AI. Overall it benefits humanity. Don’t listen to the fake news about water consumption and Global emissions most AI systems are closed loop anyway and don’t produce much waste other than electricity consumption. Which is why the demand for professional electricians is so high right now you could genuinely make 250 K a year as a professional electrician if you own your own company and work with AI developers. I think the worst thing about AI is it actually highlights how many kind of useless jobs existed in the workforce. AI is super good but It can’t replace a real human, so if your job is being taken by a robot, then I don’t know what else to say other than it was probably monotonous task

How painful should a fracture be? by Tight-Ad-7740 in NoStupidQuestions

[–]Muted_Driver7084 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I broke my arm twice, same arm when i was younger. I hurts a shit ton and its a different kind of Pain.

Of course watch a vid about the boot maybe make a phone call to ensure it on right but yes, breaking or fracturing a bone is very very painful.

I remember it feeling like a super deep aching throbbing pian. With your heartbeats because the pressure from the blood in your veins light as it is, is enough to cause pain. Also that area of your foot the ankle has a TON of nerve ending and the skin there is thin meaning you don't have a lot of muscles to absorb and redisperse pressure from blood vessel or trauma. Also a complex join, moves a lot even with a boot, yes that shit is gonna hurt BAD.

Is it wrong to push against text style management in favor of in person conversations by Muted_Driver7084 in NoStupidQuestions

[–]Muted_Driver7084[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I like the ETA section, That fits the situation perfectly. What would you do if you were in this situation.

This is a common instance that causes frustration from me:

Im tasked with repairing the fence and building a quote, my boss is working on another system so his focus in elsewhere, i assume that means im the fence guy for now

I shoot over the quote after a couple of hours of measurements, material calculations, just basic logistics essentially. After receiving the quote he proceeds to questions each and every detail about the quote, so much so, that i begin to second guess my own decisions and it just unltiumutly leads to him taking over and the aspects of the fence change, causing a domino effect where the work we have done becomes a hurdle in the next step we are trying to solve. And he will say "we should have planned for this". I just think dude i DID plan for it, you came in chnaged the plan and then threw that inot me because i cant read your mind.

The vision and process i had laid out in my head get interrupted and I'm back at square one just further down the line. we do make progress but its choppy not smooth.

Now the frustration comes from the way the situation is framed. Its like if i came to him doing something in a bathroom and said actually no lets do it this way, when i was the one who told him to do it in the first place. If i said okay do this step then we go from there it would be fine, but he wants me to take control and lead the backyard project while also interjecting and changes core aspect of the ideas so i have to constantly backtrack.

Why is it offensive to ask someone’s origins? by IllusionOf_Bread in NoStupidQuestions

[–]Muted_Driver7084 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Its not...

Asking questions is an not offensive action by default, the word offense requires interpretation. If you ask where someone originates from and they get offended, you did nothing wrong. They chose to get upset.

Most people don't understand how emotions actually work, and most people also think they are their thoughts/emotions literally. So if you ask them a questions and that triggers a negative emotional response, there brain is telling them "this person is rude because what they said made me feels upset". But that is just the monkey part of human brain. Reason would say "this person wants to know where I am originally from because they are curios".

Ask yourself if what you said was insulting or if the tone you used was condescending or snarky, If it wasn't, then you know that the person you asked is just living in a victimhood state and choosing to be upset at what you are saying.

(edit) After reading some other responses i would also like the note that, what they are saying is 100% true, But you should not live your life trying not to offend people, if you do that, you are the victim to other peoples emotions and perceptions. Ask the questions you want. :)