Levorotatory
Experienced
- Joined
- Nov 4, 2018
- Posts
- 79
People said that about electronic calculators and arithmetic skills too. Are the people who pull out calculators to multiply things by 10 at a disadvantage when they take university level mathematics courses where calculators are prohibited and they need learn to do arithmetic in their heads while they are learning calculus or linear algebra? Maybe. But at least some of them still pass.The problem with AI is that it is a crutch. People will use it for simple, basic things. They will come to rely on it. And then, when they come to the point that they want to create something 'from the soul' they will find it that much more difficult/virtually impossible, because they used AI for the basics rather than learn to do it for themselves. So then, they will use AI instead. The skill will be lost to create top end products, because the learning experience necessary will have been skipped.
Has it? Anyone can crop and adjust brightness and contrast, but not everyone can do it well. There is still skill involved in effectively using the range of tools image editing software to make a photograph look better. Also, a lot of traditional photography was just taking lots of pictures and selecting the good ones. Digital photography just made that technique cheaper and more accessible.It's like digital photography agains negative or slide film, the art has been removed, HDR, Photoshop, etc. has removed the art of taking a good photo.
You can know grammar and still miss errors. Reading what you intended to write rather than what you actually wrote is common. Grammar checking can catch those errors.Au contraire... if you know your grammar, you can tell whether it has correctly corrected. Of course, in that case, you have no need of it. Otherwise, you are taking it on trust.