It has begun.. | IBM is tripling the number of Gen Z entry-level jobs after finding the limits of AI adoption | Fortune (fortune.com)
from abbadon420@sh.itjust.works to programming@programming.dev on 15 Feb 06:46
https://sh.itjust.works/post/55359748

Gen Z jobs aren’t dead yet: $240 billion tech giant IBM says it’s rewriting entry-level jobs—and tripling down on its hiring of young talent.

#programming

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Auster@thebrainbin.org on 15 Feb 06:51 next collapse

Or maybe AI was the last strain in a series of problems that were stopping younger people from getting jobs.

Or even, perhaps AI as a strain could be an excuse to reposition back into hiring new people.

altphoto@lemmy.today on 15 Feb 07:17 next collapse

Limits… AI make me a coffee…
Sure…blah blah history of coffee 1) it will boost your energy… Blah blah bullshit blah blah… 20 years later… The coffee must be smooth and have at least two boba in it…sure! Here’s the beverage you were thinking about!..

But this is a penis! Okay from the top! I want my morning coffee, not brown. Do not make the actual day into something brown. I meant to say the coffee that I want is brown. Yes the color called coffee is brown, but I want a brown beverage and not a color. The brown beverage is not poo,it’s coffee. Yes poo does look brown but its not coffee. No, I didn’t mean Dock brown. Yes duck brown is probably a color but I was asking for the beverage that we get by boiling coffee beans. No, not the brown beans for burritos…

abbadon420@sh.itjust.works on 15 Feb 08:08 collapse

To be fair to the LLM. On any given moment in time, it is very likely that I am thinking of penis.

JakenVeina@midwest.social on 15 Feb 09:26 collapse

NGL, you had me going at “to be fair to the LLM”.

lath@lemmy.world on 15 Feb 07:27 next collapse

Decent pay and benefits or just minimal pay and no benefits?

becausechemistry@piefed.social on 15 Feb 07:30 next collapse

I worked at IBM.

The people that run that place are the biggest corporate brain-rot dumbasses in the world. The only way to climb into their ranks is to be enough of a waste of oxygen that you aren’t threatening.

I was doing a chemistry project. One aspiring corporate idiot couldn’t believe why my group didn’t want to “incorporate blockchain” into our project. He’s a VP now.

If they ever do anything right, it’s only because they’ve run out of dumb shit things to do first. I assume those poor young people they’ll be hiring will be laid off at the first whiff of the next corporate fad.

protist@mander.xyz on 15 Feb 07:49 next collapse

This has become the culture at many if not most large companies. Only the people who are willing to totally debase themselves and incessantly parrot the company line rise to the top, and that has an inverse relationship with talent.

abbadon420@sh.itjust.works on 15 Feb 08:08 collapse

I guess that is why consultancy is such a big thing?

SmackemWittadic@lemmy.world on 15 Feb 11:10 next collapse

It’s not better in consultancy, actually. I know a few good people who couldn’t find work in any other companies in their field, and consultancy firms pay well but overwork their employees to the bone.

None of them could last more than a few months before deciding they’d had enough of companies and their illogical corporate strategies. Especially when it comes to companies that don’t want to change their carbon footprint.

Honestly I can understand their rage. Seeing people who think they’re right and refuse to change pains me too

toynbee@lemmy.world on 15 Feb 14:37 next collapse

<img alt="Dilbert’s “Brown Ring of Quality”" src="https://i.pinimg.com/736x/42/75/96/42759664f96b238fa044e4aed4bbb328.jpg">

Fun fact: I searched DDG for “brown ring of quality” and it returned Lucent Technology. Do with that what you will.

ChickenLadyLovesLife@lemmy.world on 15 Feb 16:17 collapse

Lol I found the only less competent people than the managers were the consultants they hired.

With one hilarious exception: at my first real programming gig I was left alone and I had created the sort of vastly overcomplicated, unmaintainable mess that newbie programmers always manage to create. My company brought in a highly-paid consultant who correctly identified the problem: me. Since I was a rock star, my managers laughed and sent the consultant packing and I was allowed to keep fucking things up for another year or so.

biotin7@sopuli.xyz on 15 Feb 08:39 next collapse

Blockchain in chemistry ? WTF ‽

glowie@infosec.pub on 15 Feb 09:58 next collapse

Imagine oxygen NFTs bro

whyNotSquirrel@sh.itjust.works on 15 Feb 09:58 collapse

you could secure the next molecules via Blockchained AI of course

Railcar8095@piefed.social on 15 Feb 11:03 next collapse

I had IBM as a client. A very high level executive was over the moon when we showed a sql query, a basic select-agg-groupby thing. He loved our “natural language data extraction technology”. The meeting wasnt about that, he just asumed we had invented sql queries.

His staff was furious but couldnt correct him live in front of a large audience.

We signed a multi million contract based on this persons lack of understanding, we didnt even have to lie, he just fooled himself.

gnutrino@programming.dev on 15 Feb 11:07 next collapse

That’s fucking hilarious given that SQL was actually invented by IBM

passepartout@feddit.org on 15 Feb 14:13 next collapse

Reminds me of the peter principle. You’ll get promoted until you’re no longer doing a good enough job to justify another promotion. This leads to having incompetent people in higher positions.

anton@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 15 Feb 16:43 collapse

Under the peter principle you only get one level above your competency, that guy sounds high as a kite.

ChickenLadyLovesLife@lemmy.world on 15 Feb 16:15 collapse

I had a boss once come to me with an article he had just read about how APIs were the next big thing in programming. He told me I should incorporate some APIs in our software and I told him I would research it. This was in 2010.

ChickenLadyLovesLife@lemmy.world on 15 Feb 16:13 next collapse

I interned at IBM in the late '80s at the TJ Watson research facility. I have no idea if that’s still around or if it’s still what it used to be, but at the time it was a pretty amazing place, filled with brilliant people doing stuff that may or may not have been directly related to the corporate bottom line. Benoit Mandelbrot (the chaos theory guy) had an office there. There was an unused scanning electron microscope parked in the hallway outside of our lab because there was nowhere else to put it. I learned to use CADCAM on enormous monitors; it was a blast to design something, send it electronically to the machine shop for fabrication and have it delivered on a cart the next day (sometimes the same day). I worked on a project repurposing these miniature electric punches that had been designed for ceramic green sheets (the way they built their mainframe cores back then) and then got to experiment creating a new hole-punching technique using pressurized fluids. They let you do whatever you felt like doing even if you were just an intern. There were no corporate idiots anywhere in sight there.

As far as I can tell, that part of IBM (the actual innovation) is gone.

a_non_monotonic_function@lemmy.world on 15 Feb 18:05 collapse

Blockchain. XD

tinsuke@lemmy.world on 15 Feb 07:55 next collapse

archive.ph/I1p8D

The depiction isn’t so rosy for people against the use of AI. Yes, entry level jobs are reopening, but they’re looking for people with AI skills, that show initiative and comfort with it.

[deleted] on 15 Feb 08:23 next collapse
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pycorax@sh.itjust.works on 15 Feb 08:27 collapse

So they’re doubling down and ignoring the root of the problems that they’ve found? Classic.

mysticpickle@lemmy.ca on 15 Feb 12:51 next collapse

Pretty sure they’re hiring to display “growth” and please the shareholders. In another year or so, one of the execs looking to meet KPIs to qualify for their outrageous pay package will “cut costs” by laying off everyone they hired the previous year 😮‍💨

HootinNHollerin@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 15 Feb 15:03 next collapse

They laid off 9000 people in the US a few months ago

FizzyOrange@programming.dev on 15 Feb 15:42 collapse

A whopping 3% of their workforce.

No_Eponym@lemmy.ca on 15 Feb 18:15 collapse

Hey, and they can get new grads much cheaper than the 3% they fired! Win win!

Test_Tickles@lemmy.world on 15 Feb 15:16 next collapse

By that, they they mean that they are adding responsibilities and reducing pay.

Randomgal@lemmy.ca on 15 Feb 15:24 next collapse

What the next cheaper thing we can do until we can actually fire them all and replace them with machines?

Entry level of course!

imdoneinteracting@sh.itjust.works on 15 Feb 17:20 collapse

All juniors are hourly and under 30 hours a week

Chakravanti@monero.town on 15 Feb 15:43 collapse

Stanley Kubrick and STARSET do well to point out what we “can’t” say happening in It Has Begun