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Posted by colinprince 9 hours ago

ATMs didn't kill bank teller jobs, but the iPhone did(davidoks.blog)
282 points | 331 commentspage 4
j45 6 hours ago|
Many banks wanted their branches to become like Apple stores where it's self serve even though that's not what an Apple store is.
MagicMoonlight 3 hours ago||
This must be an amerilard phenomenon. There’s no way the number of bank tellers has remained constant in the western world. I haven’t been to a bank branch in 10 years.
throw7 7 hours ago||
Uhhh... if it's 'mobile banking' that killed teller jobs, what does the iPhone have to do with anything other than clickbait? (I guess I answered my own question)
layer8 7 hours ago|
For better or worse, the iPhone kickstarted the mobile revolution.
boxed 8 hours ago||
The graph showing that "Bank teller employment has fallen off a cliff" is not zero based. This is pretty damn bad. The graph looks like it's going down 90%, but it's actually going from 350k to 150k. That's a ~60% drop which is a lot, but not "falling off a cliff".
LPisGood 8 hours ago||
60% is pretty well in “falling off a cliff” territory. The graph is misleading but that phrase, to me, is not.
mx_03 8 hours ago|||
60% job loss is not off a cliff?

That huge job loss also means no hiring. If you were a bank teller you would seriously need to consider a job switch

kdheiwns 8 hours ago||
Probably a bigger sign to look for would be average age of bank tellers vs other occupations. If it's trending higher, then it's likely just people who've been doing the job for a long time and serving other older customers. I have a feeling not many young people are becoming tellers or even needing their services, but I can't verify it.
GuinansEyebrows 9 hours ago||
> an AI system is literally a machine that can think and do things itself

why do so many writers claim this as a matter of fact? are we losing (or did we never have) a shared definition of the word "think"? can an LLM, at this time, function with zero human input whatsoever?

edit to add: these are genuine questions, not meant to be rhetorical :)

it's hard for me to gauge a broader understanding of AI/LLMs since most of the conversations i experience around them are here, or in negative contexts with people i know. and i'll admit i'm one of those negative people, but my general aversion to AI mostly has to do with my own anxiety around my mental health and cognitive ability in a use-it-or-lose-it sense, along with a disdain for its use in traditionally-creative fields.

derektank 8 hours ago|
>are we losing (or did we never have) a shared definition of the word "think"

People have been saying, “the computer is thinking,” while webpages are loading or software is running for as long as I’ve been consciously aware. I agree there’s something new about describing AI as, “literally a machine that can think,” but language has always had fuzzy borders

TimTheTinker 8 hours ago|||
It's wild to watch documentaries from the 1980s where a primitive computer is said to be "a thinking machine" that is "taking most of the work out of a job".
GuinansEyebrows 8 hours ago|||
yeah, for sure. i really think some people are under the impression that LLMs are a form of general AI that actually processes thought rather than being an admittedly-impressive exponential autocomplete.

though i'm not by any means an AI booster, my question wasn't really meant to be taken as a gotcha - more a general taking stock of where we're at in terms of broader understanding of these technologies outside of the professional AI/hobbyist world.

themarogee 5 hours ago||
[flagged]
ohgeekz_com 4 hours ago||
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jama211 5 hours ago|
Not sure it’s great to start this with jd Vance…