>Unless twice the work is suddenly required, which I doubt.
I'm not sure why you doubt it. In a company, efficiency improvements never mean you don't have to do as much work. They always mean you just have more time in the day for extra work. It's part of the reason I really don't care at all about automation, LLMs, etc, at least from an efficiency perspective. (there's another case to be made for automated response, etc.) I hear people say that it opens them up to do more of the interesting work they care about, but in practice I've never seen this be true.
It feels lot like when people in IT talk about how they are "always learning new things." Yes, that's true, but what you're learning is worthless: An updated UI for Defender, a new proprietary query language, branding hierarchies for tech company products, etc. It's all worthless knowledge.
I'm not sure why you doubt it. In a company, efficiency improvements never mean you don't have to do as much work. They always mean you just have more time in the day for extra work. It's part of the reason I really don't care at all about automation, LLMs, etc, at least from an efficiency perspective. (there's another case to be made for automated response, etc.) I hear people say that it opens them up to do more of the interesting work they care about, but in practice I've never seen this be true.
It feels lot like when people in IT talk about how they are "always learning new things." Yes, that's true, but what you're learning is worthless: An updated UI for Defender, a new proprietary query language, branding hierarchies for tech company products, etc. It's all worthless knowledge.