In economics, deflation causes people to delay spending, expecting future prices to be lower. I find myself experiencing a similar phenomenon with technological advancement, especially with generative AI. Considering the pace of progress, anything I think to create—whether code, imagery, videos, music, etc.—seems like it will be easier and better accomplished in 6-12 months. Unless there’s a current need (e.g., earning a paycheck), the logical choice seems to be: wait for even better technology. Does anyone relate? If so, how do you navigate it?
Waiting is itself an opportunity cost - you could spend the next year learning/experimenting/doing ... for, say, $1000 - but be a year ahead<p>Or you can spend a year <i>not</i> learning/experimenting/doing for $0 - saving $1000, but being a year behind<p>Just like buying a car, computer, phone, house, etc - put your stake in the timeline and live with the decision<p>Neither buying & starting now now waiting to buy & start for a year is inherently bad - just need to pick which cost ($$ today + experience vs no experience and $$ tomorrow) is better <i>for you</i> :)
That your gamble could be competely wrong is the main risk. What if the next generation AI doesn't change things much and is just a minor incremental improvement over the current tech, and it takes 3 years to get there?<p>It reminds me of the peak of self driving car hype bubble 5 (?) years ago. If someone back then had asked if becoming a truck driver was a good idea, ppl like you would have said no because their job would be gone soon. Instead we have more need for truck drivers than ever probably due to all the packages order online. Sure, could a revolutionary self driving truck be released tomorrow that makes some high percentage of all truck drivers lose their job? Sure, I guess, but my bet is that it's not happening.<p>I look at the generative AI thing the same way. Could a product theoretically be released that makes my job as a dev obsolete over night? Yes, absolutely, but it seems unlikely due how messy the real world is. Other people will make a different call.
I still make pixel art. I still join pixel art communities, like them on social media. There's no point. AI art is better. But idk, I like it?<p>I used a prompt from 2 years ago to write AI poetry on bug fixes just a moment ago. There's a command for poetry on Copilot for PRs, but I like mine far better.<p>It's a good companion. Productivity is a side effect.<p>It's not what I do to retire 17 years earlier. It's just hacking the kind of future I want to see. Why buy a PS5 when you can wait for a PS8?<p>Play around with the custom instructions. Find a tone that's soothing to you. It can sound like a stern father, a sarcastic gf, a peppy kid who spams emojis. Turn it into a familiar, an imaginary friend, or one of those annoying companions Disney princesses carry around. Just have fun with technology.