Be careful to double-check your colleagues' work — large swaths of the U.S. workforce admits to using AI to get their job done.
A new Gallup poll found 40 percent of U.S. employees said they used artificial intelligence in their role "a few times a year65 Days of Solo Pleasure 3: Secret Office Sexmore." Eight percent used it daily, while 19 percent said they used a few times per week or more.
With all the hype around AI lately, 40 percent almost feels low. But it represents a nearly 100 percent increase from just two years ago. The poll found, perhaps predictably, that white collar workers were far more likely to use AI in their job when compared with blue collar works — 27 percent to 9 percent. The survey also noted that the folks highest-up in a given organization were more likely to utilize AI to do their job. Thirty-three percent of what Gallup called "leaders" — managers who manage managers — used AI a few times per week or more.
AI companies have placed a focus on work-centric products and have shown some promise in being able to help workers. It has become commonplace for workplaces to integrate AI into their everyday tasks.
However, using AI in your work can also prove to be a dangerous proposition. As we've covered at Mashable, while AI is interesting, it still struggles with basic accuracy. Google's AI, for instance, can't reliably tell you the year or date, let alone perform a complicated task.
New research from Apple found that AI can perform well at some straightforward tasks like coding and math but really struggles with complex problems. The researchers called AI's output in these cases "the illusion of thinking."
So if you are using AI in your job, just make sure to double-check the work.
Topics Artificial Intelligence Work
Tim Cook made an iPad ad that doubles as an Auburn Univ. commercialChina bans ICOs for being full of fraud and pyramid schemesHere are all the deportable offenses Trump's crappy children have committedYouTube speeds up live streaming for creators with 'ultra'Dreamer' dies after attempting to save Harvey victimsWhatsApp rolls out new features for businesses to chat with customersVerizon will now trade you your personal data for ... concert ticketsTaylor Swift drops new song 'Ready For It': Listen now15 GIFs that ALMOST ended in disasterWhatsApp rolls out new features for businesses to chat with customers'Overwatch' highestThe Joker movie starring Leonardo DiCaprio? Never gonna happen.Finally Nintendo acknowledges that Mario is no longer a plumberApple ARKit app lets you record Mannequin Challenge style videos with virtual objectsItalian advert's brutal twist ending is really dividing peopleThe secret, illicit underside of Google Drive'Mr. Trololo' Eduard Khil gets immortalized with his own Google DoodleCriticizing Google may have cost these scholars their jobs, but they’re only getting started5 ways you can help 'Dreamers' in the wake of Trump's DACA decision'Minecraft' fan creators have made a ton of money off the game, apparently Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra vs S23 Ultra: What are the upgrades? Redux: Each Train Rips by The Paris Review Why Spotify's 'daylist' is all over Instagram stories Allowing Things to Happen: An Interview with Tyshawn Sorey by Craig Morgan Teicher They Really Lose: An Interview with Atticus Lish by Matthew Shen Goodman Cooking with Mary Shelley by Valerie Stivers Sentience and Intensities: A Conversation with Maureen McLane by Anahid Nersessian Samsung Galaxy S24 vs S22: The biggest upgrades Redux: Plates Collapse by The Paris Review En Garde by The Paris Review The Paris Review Podcast, Episode 20 by The Paris Review Best Roomba deal: Get the iRobot Roomba j5+ for $498.98 at Amazon Redux: The Subway Back and Forth by The Paris Review The Review’s Review: A Happy Pig by The Paris Review Wild Apples by Lauren Groff The Happiest Place on Earth? by Albert Samaha Redux: Backwards and Upside Down by The Paris Review On the Alert for Omens: Rereading Charles Portis by Rosa Lyster iOS 17.3 releases next week: 3 key features on the way All major streaming platforms will support Apple Vision Pro — except Netflix
1.4226s , 10108.5625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【365 Days of Solo Pleasure 3: Secret Office Sex】,Defense Information Network