Comments

You must log in or register to comment.

StrawInANeedleStack t1_j9yx2sd wrote

I imagine that there will be very little demand for this in the future. As AI improves it will get better at interpreting prompts correctly, and it will be able to iterate based of feedback. Anyone will be able to write effective prompts to get the output they want. There will probably be no need for specialized 'prompt engineers'.

18

pete_68 t1_j9yxzvn wrote

I think there will be a demand for it. You need to be able to write to a certain degree of detail. I disagree with u/StrawInANeedleStack in this regard because until AI can read you're mind, you're going to have to be able to think through the problem and be able to pull out all the relevant details. That's not something a lot of people have an innate ability to do.

Prompting is a skill that will require development and again, until they can read our minds, it's always going to be a skill.

That said, I think it will be mixed with your job. If you're an ad writer, you'll be an ad writer with prompt expertise, or a software developer with prompt expertise, etc...

And I'll offer an example: Try to describe the layout of a web page like Google News, in detail, so ChatGPT can reproduce the layout in HTML and CSS. It's a lot of freaking words with tremendous detail and describing it in a way that isn't confusing for the AI is incredibly difficult. Ask me how I know.

−1

earthsworld t1_j9yyp2r wrote

lol. You realize that chatGPT can already do a better job than you?

0

KaneHau t1_j9yyy36 wrote

There already is a demand for prompt engineering, with excellent pay too. However, I suspect that this will be a very short lived opportunity, as AI will quickly evolve beyond the need. I think in the very near term, we will se AI prompt engineers.

5

vuxanov t1_j9zrwwe wrote

Writing prompts is only necessary because currently Midjourney is in a form of Discord server. As soon as they or someone else creates a proper user interface there will be no need for writing anything. Or very little need.

3

ThumbsUp2323 t1_ja04spx wrote

>It's a lot of freaking words with tremendous detail and describing it in a way that isn't confusing for the AI is incredibly difficult.

I think the point you're missing is that very soon there won't be any reason to describe the layout of a website in tremendous detail. The "prompt" would be "reproduce the layout of Google News in HTML and CSS"

4

pete_68 t1_ja054r8 wrote

>I think the point you're missing is...

I provided an example. Now come up with a novel website with the complexity of Google News and do it in 30 words or less.

Who's missing the point?

1

Lord0fHats t1_ja0l5um wrote

Prompting is a skill in the same sense that using a search engine is.

There was a time early in the dot com era where people were paid for being able to wrangle search engines. It's not much of a job anymore since its existence mostly owed itself to the machine being unintuitive and a lot of older people being tech unsavvy.

Why would you need to describe a web page layout in one go anyway? If there isn't a generative AI that can take overt successive steps one command at a time already, there will be eventually. You'd never need to sum up the entirety of the page in one go.

1

pete_68 t1_ja0lfmb wrote

No. Prompting is a skill like WRITING is a skill. People who can't write good prompts get shitty result. People who know how to write good prompts get good results. Half the people I see posting on here "Chat GPT can't do this or can't do that," don't know how to write a decent prompt.

And again, someone show me how you're going to prompt ChatGPT to write HTML and CSS to build something novel, with the same complexity as Google News, without confusing ChatGPT and actually getting something resembling what you want. I challenge anyone here to post that prompt.

Because I've done it. I know how hard it is to find the language that isn't confusing to the AI. You have to be careful about using words like "it" to make sure that the AI knows which of the 50 things you've previously discussed is the thing you're referring to.

All the people downvoting me haven't done anything more than trivial prompts with ChatGPT. Anyone who's done anything of any real complexity knows how hard it can be.

1

Lord0fHats t1_ja0mfm6 wrote

Good luck I guess.

Irony is, once this stuff evolves out of single input generation and starts including 'select' and 'crop' the ability to understand basic design principles is just going to surge back into importance while the ability to 'prompt' is going to go back to being not very special.

It's also, hilariously, probably going to end a lot of this debate, since the process of selectively generating multiple pieces into a whole is a very different world.

1

strppngynglad t1_ja14tr1 wrote

There will be no need to prompt engineer very soon

1

Saltedcaramel525 t1_ja4p8fl wrote

There will be no demand. Writing prompts could be a skill at best and would become part of your job. Just another task to do. I don't think a company would hire a full-time prompt writer (and what a soul-killing job it would be). Besides, as AI progresses, it will write prompts for itself

2