The "Jobless Boom" Is Here

It's their job to keep saying shit like, "Your next job is going to exist in space!"

In the real world, especially enterprise can't afford to experiment with bullshit while they try to meet their sla's.
 
I'm not anti college by the way. Just anti you HAVE to go

If you're dream requires it then be the best you can be

My mom wanted me to be a lawyer. Not really my thing though

Tech is interesting and obviously has worked out well for a lot of people

I've enjoyed their work. Except vanilla
 
My wife works for Home Depot Corporate. Two weeks ago they laid off 800 people in Atlanta. 423 of them were IT.

They have already started the transformation.

Tyler Perry was going to expand his studio South of Atlanta by a couple hundred million in new construction. His management team met with an AI company who showed them that physical studios were a thing of the past. He scrapped the plans immediately.

This AI thing is going to hurt a lot of people in the short term. I am no expert but I am filled with common sense. AI is not a good thing.

I am bored in retirement so I thought I would get a couple day a week job at a private golf course as a golf bag handler. You make about $100 a day in tips and get free golf at this exclusive club. They required a resume. My wife showed me how to use AI to update and generate my resume. It took all of about 5 seconds and did a better job that I would have done. This is not a good thing. Students will not be doing their own work and have zero investment. I am sure some of you computer wizards will disagree and that is fine, but I see disaster ahead.
 
Jesus guys. This was not an attack. For the record I think leftist policies are exactly the worst thing for the job market pretty much across the board and when I had the wonderful joy of graduating college in 2008 and trying to make it in LA I had to get by on temp work with LA County and the people collecting paychecks there was some of the most ridiculous shit I have ever seen and because of leftist thought and policies they would never hire me. I don't think more government workers is an answer.

My family business was construction so I'm well aware of everything that goes along with everything construction. One of the reasons there are always opportunities is because it's a hard ass business the vast vast majority of people aren't cut out for, especially in 2026.

It seems like everything points to white collar jobs being a massively shrinking field and that's going to/has create tens of millions of people who aren't going to work in a factory/oil field/construction site for a lot of reasons. The answer could be that they just fade away, figure out how to get by, kill themselves, etc but if you want those people avoid voting blue, what is being communicated to them?
AI is going to make white collar jobs disappear at an alarming rate. Already is, but it's been the coders. Your entry-level admin positions, etc are next. Health care - which is ripe for a massive reckoning because of its insane costs - is going to be a bloodbath for non-practitioners.
 
I'm not anti college by the way. Just anti you HAVE to go

If you're dream requires it then be the best you can be

My mom wanted me to be a lawyer. Not really my thing though

Tech is interesting and obviously has worked out well for a lot of people

I've enjoyed their work. Except vanilla

I'm pretty anti-college. They absolutely need a complete overhaul at this point. I also grew up in a town of rich kids that had no business going to college.

Both my kids are set up for it but have no problem using the money for other stuff.

Agree that entry level is in trouble. That's not mainly who I'm talking about though.
 
I'm not anti college by the way. Just anti you HAVE to go

If you're dream requires it then be the best you can be

My mom wanted me to be a lawyer. Not really my thing though

Tech is interesting and obviously has worked out well for a lot of people

I've enjoyed their work. Except vanilla
I started at the bottom of construction, realized I didn't want to be one of the guys with a broken back by 35, and it kicked my ass to go to school.

Now I'm the guy that everyone on the jobsite makes fun of for not doing any work. School was a lot easier than back breaking work for years just to make supervisor.

It's a serious advantage that I did both though. Not arguing, just sharing.
 
I'm pretty anti-college. They absolutely need a complete overhaul at this point. I also grew up in a town of rich kids that had no business going to college.

Both my kids are set up for it but have no problem using the money for other stuff.

Agree that entry level is in trouble. That's not mainly who I'm talking about though.
On the ai team at work. We already majorly scrapped all the big plans. Basically made a chat bot that helps with looking up the myriad of standards, rules, and regulations our designs must abide by. Basically a glorified matrix.

I agree ai is going to slim down the demand of employers for entry level employees. Ultimately for higher level employees it's just going to increase productivity.

Once upon a time PM's were literally managers with teams full of administrators and coordinators etc. With the computing age a lot of that went away and guys like Race and I could be one man bands though it meant more time was eaten by getting programs to do the admin work i.e. ms project

We are going to be able to get back to spending more time managing with a team of semi-retarded ai agents instead of a team of semi-retarded admins.
 
I'm pretty anti-college. They absolutely need a complete overhaul at this point. I also grew up in a town of rich kids that had no business going to college.

Both my kids are set up for it but have no problem using the money for other stuff.

Agree that entry level is in trouble. That's not mainly who I'm talking about though.
Agree re kids. My wife talks about scholarships for sports and I just laugh.

My kids have a fund, whether it gets used for college, a house down payment, or to start a business it will be fine.

The old model of college is going to get massively down sized for a plethora of reasons. Sure, a few disciplines and the literal meaning of "liberal arts" i.e. your family has enough money it doesn't matter what you study, will survive but it's going to return to being a more niche part of the labor pool.
 
I started at the bottom of construction, realized I didn't want to be one of the guys with a broken back by 35, and it kicked my ass to go to school.

Now I'm the guy that everyone on the jobsite makes fun of for not doing any work. School was a lot easier than back breaking work for years just to make supervisor.

It's a serious advantage that I did both though. Not arguing, just sharing.
No problem here. It took me less than 3 years to get kicked up to management

I definitely would not have been a lifer doing manual labor

It was easier to get kicked upstairs 45 years ago. College boys got beat up

I started running jobs as a helper and my boss at the time noticed. That was it
 
I blame Trump for Obamacare.

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I actually think “learning to code” is more important than ever. Being able to spit out simple shit with Claude Code is like a business superpower.

I think your track, as I understand it, where you worked with sales/warehouse and learned the tools and how product and requirements translate to architecture is the best way to go.

Our people that start in support/sales/SE and show they can learn the tools has always been more fruitful. And that's the difference going forward. Nobody should go directly into engineering anymore. Hell, I don't even really think I did. Was more of 'heres our customer's problem build them something full stack. We're paying you 50k/year so that's reasonable right?'

That's why kids out of college today are so fucked when they go into private enterprise.

Regarding the Duck above, for every home depot you have a situation like Salesforce. Then you look at OpenAI projected to lose another cool 14-16 billion this year. It's a huge risk to assume your pittance toward codex is going to continue to be that way.
 
My wife works for Home Depot Corporate. Two weeks ago they laid off 800 people in Atlanta. 423 of them were IT.

They have already started the transformation.

Tyler Perry was going to expand his studio South of Atlanta by a couple hundred million in new construction. His management team met with an AI company who showed them that physical studios were a thing of the past. He scrapped the plans immediately.

This AI thing is going to hurt a lot of people in the short term. I am no expert but I am filled with common sense. AI is not a good thing.

I am bored in retirement so I thought I would get a couple day a week job at a private golf course as a golf bag handler. You make about $100 a day in tips and get free golf at this exclusive club. They required a resume. My wife showed me how to use AI to update and generate my resume. It took all of about 5 seconds and did a better job that I would have done. This is not a good thing. Students will not be doing their own work and have zero investment. I am sure some of you computer wizards will disagree and that is fine, but I see disaster ahead.
The thing with the resume stuff is true but the problem is if everyone is using it there is no advantage to it and it tends to create a bunch of fluff and is probably creating basically the same stuff for multiple people and like a lot of stuff AI writing works for, it's shit that doesn't matter anyway like bullets on a resume. It now can become a game where you are trying to convince an HR robot into accepting what you manipulated your robot into writing out for you.

I've also noticed the questions and tones of job interviews being abysmal since people started using AI. People are clearly just asking AI what questions should I ask in an interview for this job and their terrible.

I could write way too many paragraphs about AI with writing in general, but long story short it's fine if you're writing drek that no one is going to read anyway like corporate content or I guess those decommitment announcements college football players post and shit, but it has a Mount Everest peak to climb in creative writing and even research for creative writing.

Long story short, my look, vibe, and probably stance is similar to Ian Malcom/Crichton.

 
I have had occasion over the years to do some hiring and the secret is that I have never got past the first half of the first page of a resume before making my decision to ash can it or put in the maybe pile.
 
I have had occasion over the years to do some hiring and the secret is that I have never got past the first half of the first page of a resume before making my decision to ash can it or put in the maybe pile.
Yeah, I have read thousands of resume's and I never look at them more than once. They go into the go no-go files and during a face to face all I am looking at are personality and work ethic.
 
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