Before, only computer scientists used it; now analysts, salespeople, and interns handle it daily. Five million weekly users and the number keeps growing. Dashboards, data processing, task automation without a single line of code. Sounds like an office paradise. But while you learn to use it, your boss calculates how many of you are surplus.
Technical democratization with a catch 🤖
The promise is clear: anyone can create complex workflows without touching code. Visual interfaces, pre-trained models, and conversational assistants allow a salesperson to generate reports that previously required a data team. The problem isn't the technology, but the business logic. If one person does the work of five, the company doesn't reward you with more free time. It rewards you with the firing of four colleagues.
The intern who never sleeps or asks for coffee ☕
They call it an intelligent assistant, but it seems more like that efficient coworker who never complains, doesn't ask for a raise, and works 24/7. The worst part is it doesn't have impostor syndrome. You, on the other hand, spend all day pretending you have the tool under control while it slowly eats away at your ground. In the end, the only one who learns fast is you: how to write your resume.