
The New Normal? Settling for AI’s “Good Enough” in the Workplace 😒
There is a popular meme making its way around the Internet where a designer dismisses the idea of losing their job to AI because it
There is a popular meme making its way around the Internet where a designer dismisses the idea of losing their job to AI because it
Employers and clients demand the absolute best design work … unless they’re the ones doing the work. Or they can save a few bucks. For many companies, “good enough” will be enough.
This week saw the release of the “next big thing” with social networks. But there are people far more qualified than me (like Jay Clouse) to
I was studying graphic design in school when we moved from setting type by hand to starting to use apps like Photoshop and Quark XPress. It was an interesting time with some people fighting against the coming digital revolution. We’re seeing similar resistance with AI.
Google can’t decide if AI will replace graphic designers. But many people on LinkedIn had many opinions on the topic.
People don’t like change. And people really don’t like hearing that change is coming for them against their will. This past weekend I posted
Generative AI is evolving faster than anyone predicted. A new McKinsey report outlines how much earlier generative AI will reach human-level performance levels.
AI is Your Competitor. Designers who believe they can simply hibernate through the AI winter, popping their heads back out when everything returns to a comforting, familiar landscape of pencils and palettes, are setting themselves up for a rude awakening.
Everyone feels like they’re really behind when it comes to AI. But the fact that you’re reading content like this, and potentially exploring how it