If anyone rolled out AI for engineering, or specifically antenna engineering, it wouldn't be a general purpose chat bot. These 'AIs' can get quite specialised depending on how they're trained. Whether anyone will create such a tool or not will depend on economics of whether it's worth pooling resources into the creation of AI assistant tool for this niche target. Assuming they do decide to do it, it would be great for those well established within the field, not so great for others. The boring work has to raise the demand for antenna engineers. When you bring in extra automation, productivity increases as, for the sake of example, every 1 engineer can do the job of 2. I don't know the economics of how much $$$ goes into engineer salaries when doing an antenna project, but if it's significant, then short-term you'd expect there to be more projects as every engineer would get the job done faster - meaning less money spent on salaries. Long-term, if we're assuming the antenna demand stops growing (as enough are built such that any new ones are experiencing diminishing returns), then the salaries in this field will likely reduce for anyone but the most experienced engineers due to there being more applicants per position open than before. It would also get more difficult for the newcomers to squeeze into the field. I wonder where would the replaced antenna engineers go? Would they go from the roles of doing the design to the roles of hands-on maintenance of existing antennas? Or are there other engineering fields to which the knowledge and skills they have would easily transfer?
@RFShop
7 күн бұрын
I think AI is a topic to discuss, but between optimisation, creative classic design and customer requirements the AI thing for custom antenna integration is still a long way
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