![]() The frozen barrier is intended to limit the flow of water into the area and provide TEPCO the ability to reduce the amount of contaminated water that requires treatment and storage. One of the key countermeasures is a frozen soil barrier encircling the damaged reactor facilities. In general, the strategy represents a comprehensive example of a “defense in depth” concept that is used for nuclear facilities around the world. The diverse countermeasures work together in an integrated manner to provide different types, and several levels, of protection. This is is also why I can’t wait to see what the truly world class experts in specialised fields like qualitative GIS or rare disease pharmaceutical drug design produce.Īnd presumably there is a value curve, where specialist language increases output quality until it becomes too specialised or esoteric and then reduces it.TEPCO is implementing a number of water countermeasures to limit the releases and impacts of contaminated water to the surrounding environment. Ironically AI both enables me to find the right language from plain English inputs and a place of ignorance, whilst also being reliant on use of the proper language to produce high quality outputs.īiggest skill I think going forward in applying AI will be the ability to learn, potentially using AI, the right language for your intended use case. ![]() ![]() Honestly the biggest barrier for so many things for me (diy, coding, excel functions, etc.) has always been not knowing the right language to use. Now I can relatively confidently do basic coding pretty easily whilst also being trained. Always been interested in coding and the insane number of options it opens up for designing custom interactions between programs, customising things, etc. I wonder if there will be more people like me who are not from the programming world but would now feel like they can reap the benefits from some programming because learning and developing simple things feel more feasible with the help of AI. Particularly special for me is that I feel totally comfortable with asking very basic (if not stupid) questions, like: okay, I have no idea what you just said, what even is an integer? But more impressively, it understood the context of what I was trying to achieve and gave me a satisfactory answer to the question: the code works, the result is correct, but it is not really what I want, what did I do wrong? Yesterday I've tried gpt4 as a coding tutor and it was mind-boggling. I've made this decision because AI is giving me the sense that coding is something more achievable for me now (it feels less cryptic when I have someone/something to guide me step by step). I'm someone from a totally different career path who just decided to learn to code to help improve my own work. I wrote it because I couldn't fall asleep. But I also want to have a backup skill, and I'm still not sure what that will be. I'm interested in programming, so I want to do it if I can. But I can't help thinking about a backup plan. People are joking about losing their jobs and having to become a plumber. But now I'm afraid of my future unemployment. I used to think about marriage, having a child, and taking out a loan to buy a house. I feel like I'm living in a house that may collapse at any time. I'm not certain when, and that's what scares me. What will it be in the near future, considering how fast it's evolving? I used to think that maybe one day AI could replace programmers, but it would be years later, by which time I may have retired. You might say, "I tried it, it is still an advanced GitHub Copilot." But that's just for now. I'm especially shocked by how fast it evolved. I just considered it an "advanced GitHub Copilot." I thought it was just a tool to help me implement basic functions, but most of the program still needed to be written by a human. When ChatGPT came out, I wasn't seriously scared.
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