| ▲ | The Case of the Disappearing Secretary(rowlandmanthorpe.substack.com) | |
| 20 points by rwmj 2 hours ago | 5 comments | ||
| ▲ | vessenes 16 minutes ago | parent | next [-] | |
Some real gold from SuburbanWhiteChick in the comments:
This is PRECISELY the divide I see in engineering today - those temperamentally inclined to do things well / keep learning are entering a very exciting time. Those inclined to clock punch are rightly worried. | ||
| ▲ | ghaff an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-] | |
There's a lot to unpack in that post. And, while I never had a personal assistant, I did depend on secretaries to type up memos early in my career. One or two were good; others struggled to get something mostly correct through multiple iterations. And even a bit later--in the computer biz--there were some senior managers who had their secretaries/admins print out their emails. They'd handwrite responses, and have the secretaries/admins type them in and email them. (Though the email was only internal to the company at that point.) I don't disagree with or even lament the sentiment that a lot of secretarial work has basically been smeared across a large number of workers. While a personal assistant can be useful for some people with very busy lives, I honestly never found a shared assistant/secretary terribly useful especially as computer-based tools came into the picture and got better. | ||
| ▲ | delichon 19 minutes ago | parent | prev | next [-] | |
I love tables. If I can replace a paragraph with a table I usually do, to a fault. In college I was a research assistant in a bio lab and got assigned gobs of tables and charts to make. The way my boss did it, it was a highly non trivial task that required understanding the whole mission in general and experiment in particular. I was effectively his secretary, but it wasn't a shallow thing, it required domain expertise, which is common in secretarial work. But if I were now that professor I'd fire me, just because he could generate the table five times in the time it would take me to start the task. Maybe I could do better than the LLM on the first pass, but I couldn't keep up with the machine on the iterations, and the end result is a better match to the intention. And now the same budget can go to an actual researcher rather than the assistant. There really isn't a limit to the amount of valuable research to be done. Empowering is the right word for this technology. | ||
| ▲ | skyberrys 42 minutes ago | parent | prev | next [-] | |
I was a executive assistant when in college twenty years ago. Recognizing the writing on the wall and the fact that EA never translated into the E-suite was a huge motivator for moving past an associates degree and continuing education instead, with a left turn into computer engineering eventually. If the economy won't let me be a computer at the very least I can understand and work to build computers instead. | ||
| ▲ | moffkalast 12 minutes ago | parent | prev [-] | |
> clerical work Ah yes: reading religious tomes, preaching, healing injured adventurers with divine magic. | ||