>(for every one of these examples of annoyances, I can think of two ways to use AI to get around the annoyance. not clever programmer things, but things an average person who learns to use Codex or Claude Desktop to operate their desktop will know)

As the author said:

>I suspect that like the job market, everyone will wind up paying massive “AI” companies to manage the drudgery they created.

It could also lead to a massive crash of capitalism and reevaluation of how our society functions.

It could lead to significant progress in every single research area.

I'm at least very impressed about the amount of open models and that it doesn't hold up that the gap between public and private diverges massivly. Public is probably one year behind.