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Jensen Huang said if he were a student today, he wouldn’t prioritize coding. He’d prioritize learning how to talk to AI. Most people treat AI like Google. Type a question, get an answer, move on. Huang sees it differently. He calls it “expertise in artistry,” which sounds dramatic but...

786,400 Aufrufe • vor 5 Monaten •via X (Twitter)

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Jensen Huang doesn’t use AI the way you think he does. Huang: “90% of my instructions are actually conflated with questions.” The man behind a three trillion dollar company doesn’t give AI commands. He interrogates it. Huang: “I take the answer from one AI, give it to the other AI, ask them to critique itself.” He doesn’t trust the machine. He cross-examines it. Same question. Multiple models. Force them to argue. Then take whatever survives. The way you’d get three opinions before letting a surgeon cut you open. That is not how people use AI. They type a question. Copy the answer. Move on. They think speed is the advantage. It’s not. The advantage is what you do after the machine responds. And almost nobody does anything. AI made answers free. Eight billion people can now get an expert-level response to nearly any question in under ten seconds. Which means the answer is no longer the edge. The question is. And great questions require the one thing no model can replicate. Knowing what you don’t know. Judgment built from years of failure. Pattern recognition earned through reps. The instinct to sense when something sounds right but isn’t. That is a human skill. And it’s atrophying in real time. Because people aren’t using AI to sharpen their thinking. They’re using it to replace their thinking. Huang: “In order to formulate good questions, you have to be thinking, you have to be analytical, you have to be reasoning yourself.” Jensen didn’t say AI makes you smarter. He said you already have to be thinking for AI to work. The tool doesn’t elevate you. Your questions do. The machine just reveals the level you were already operating at. Jensen didn’t build NVIDIA into the most valuable company on earth by out-answering his competitors. He built it by asking questions they never thought to ask. Same market. Same data. Same physics. Different questions. Different empire. That’s the quiet filter. And it’s already here. AI won’t make the thoughtful obsolete. It will make the passive extinct. Every answer AI gives is available to eight billion people. The question you asked to get there isn’t. That’s the last edge a human being has. And almost nobody is protecting it.

Dustin

56,367 Aufrufe • vor 2 Monaten

Jensen Huang doesn’t use AI to think less. He uses it to think past his own limits. Huang: “90% of my instructions are actually conflated with questions.” The man running a five trillion dollar company doesn’t give AI commands. He interrogates it. Huang: “I take the answer from one AI, give it to the other AI, ask them to critique itself.” Same question. Multiple models. Pit them against each other. Keep only what survives. Not because the machine can’t be trusted. Because challenging it is where the sharpest thinking happens. Huang: “The process of critiquing, criticizing the answers, applying your critical thinking, enhances cognitive skills.” AI doesn’t replace your thinking. It demands more of it than you’ve ever given. Every question takes reasoning. Every answer takes scrutiny. The machine isn’t thinking for you. It’s pulling thinking out of you that didn’t exist before you sat down. Huang: “In order to formulate good questions, you have to be thinking, you have to be analytical, you have to be reasoning yourself.” AI is not the shortcut everyone thinks it is. It is the most powerful cognitive amplifier ever built. It sharpens the engaged. It leaves the passive exactly where they started. Same tool. Same access. The only variable is what you bring to it. The world is debating whether AI will replace human thinking. Wrong conversation. The real question is what happens when a tool built to think for you becomes the thing that forces you to think beyond yourself. That’s not a threat to humanity. That’s the entire point.

Dustin

19,369 Aufrufe • vor 4 Tagen