Stop Worrying About AI Jobs, Says Nvidia’s Jensen Huang
Forget learning to code—or at least don't make it your entire personality. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang thinks the future belongs to the storytellers, not the algorithm-chasers. A masterclass in corporate optimism or just a way to sell more chips?
Jensen Huang, the man who practically owns the hardware behind the current AI craze, is telling parents to stop obsessing over so-called AI-proof careers. Instead of hunting for majors that robots can't replace, he argues that the focus should shift to mastering technology as a tool to enhance fundamental human skills. The CEO suggests that areas like journalism, art, and design—fields long considered 'low-hanging fruit' for automation—are exactly where the human touch will remain irreplaceable.
The argument centers on the ability to listen, react, and build a meaningful dialogue. Huang pulls in the Japanese concept of wabi-sabi, which finds beauty in imperfection, to explain why AI will never truly replicate the human narrative. He views work as a basket of tasks, where the boring, repetitive chores get automated while we move on to the complex, creative bits that actually require a brain. It’s a convenient vision for someone whose company makes the very machines doing the automation.
If the world’s biggest silicon peddler is telling you to double down on your humanity, it’s probably because he knows the machine is already doing everything else better. Whether this is genuine career advice or just a push to get more people using AI tools to build content on his hardware remains the ultimate billion-dollar question.
Source: Business Insider
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