I'm curious as to how specifically hardware focused employees are using AI to help fuel their workflows? I feel there is a distinction to how a software engineer uses AI compared to a mechanical engineer.
Being able to clearly articulate the problem and ensuring you have enough contextual information has always been the differentiator between 1x and 10x folks.
The key difference now is the 10x engineer can accomplish the understanding-the-problem phase via simultaneous implementation.
You have to earn the right to see the next problem.
I'm curious as to how specifically hardware focused employees are using AI to help fuel their workflows? I feel there is a distinction to how a software engineer uses AI compared to a mechanical engineer.
Interesting point on department drift with regards to AI use & productivity. Already seeing many lopsided companies in this regard
makes sense
my new employer is all in on ai and its, surprisingly refreshing?
Great article.
Being able to clearly articulate the problem and ensuring you have enough contextual information has always been the differentiator between 1x and 10x folks.
The key difference now is the 10x engineer can accomplish the understanding-the-problem phase via simultaneous implementation.
You have to earn the right to see the next problem.