this post was submitted on 05 Feb 2024
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Ok let's give a little bit of context. I will turn 40 yo in a couple of months and I'm a c++ software developer for more than 18 years. I enjoy to code, I enjoy to write "good" code, readable and so.

However since a few months, I become really afraid of the future of the job I like with the progress of artificial intelligence. Very often I don't sleep at night because of this.

I fear that my job, while not completely disappearing, become a very boring job consisting in debugging code generated automatically, or that the job disappear.

For now, I'm not using AI, I have a few colleagues that do it but I do not want to because one, it remove a part of the coding I like and two I have the feeling that using it is cutting the branch I'm sit on, if you see what I mean. I fear that in a near future, ppl not using it will be fired because seen by the management as less productive...

Am I the only one feeling this way? I have the feeling all tech people are enthusiastic about AI.

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[โ€“] lagomorphlecture@lemm.ee 6 points 10 months ago (1 children)

They're supposed to be on script but customers veer off the script constantly. They would be extremely annoyed to be talking to AI. Not that it would stop some companies but it would be terrible customer service.

[โ€“] teawrecks@sopuli.xyz 2 points 10 months ago (1 children)

That's what tier 2 service would be for. But the vast majority of calls are people wanting to execute a simple order or transaction, or ask a silly question they could have googled.

If your problem can be solved by a bot, and it means you can be done immediatelu and don't need to be on hold for 20m+ waiting for t2 support, you're going to prefer it.

Also, we've come a long way in just 2-3 years. It will be very difficult for us to talk about how good the experience will be in 5-10 years.

[โ€“] knightly@pawb.social 2 points 10 months ago (1 children)

If your problem can be solved by a bot, then an old fashioned touch-tone phone menu would be an entirely sufficient solution, no "AI" needed.

If not, then plugging an LLM into your IVR will never be worth the expense since the customer will need to talk to a human anyway.

"AI" is a bubble. Sure, it might have some niche applications where its viable, but it's heavily overpromised and due for disinvestment this year.

[โ€“] teawrecks@sopuli.xyz 1 points 10 months ago (1 children)

And yet, we don't use touch-tone menus, bots that suck are already commonplace. An LLM bot could stand to dramatically improve the user experience, and would probably use the same resources that the current bots do.

Simple things like "I want to fill a prescription" or "I want to schedule a technician" or "do you have blah in stock" could be orchestrated by a bot that sounds human, and people would prefer that to traversing a directory tree for 10m.

I don't even want to think about how someone would implement a customer facing inventory query using a touch-tone interface, let alone use that.

[โ€“] knightly@pawb.social 1 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago) (1 children)

I fail to see how adding an LLM to an IVR could improve that situation. Keywords like "fill perscription", "schedule technician", and "do you have [blank] in stock" are already present and don't need any kind of text generation to shunt a caller into the appropriate queue or run a query on a warehouse database.

Where, exactly, do you think an LLM could contribute other than, like, a computer generated bedtime story hotline or something?

[โ€“] teawrecks@sopuli.xyz 1 points 10 months ago (1 children)

I fail to see how adding an LLM to an IVR could improve that situation.

Ok. I'm not trying to convince you of anything, nor am I the one responsible for this, I'm just very confident this will inevitably happen. Only time will tell.

[โ€“] knightly@pawb.social 1 points 10 months ago

Oh, no question. I'm sure someone will think it's a good idea and waste a lot of money on it.