This sounds more like "Nvidia Executive hints that the most cost-effective rendering option is about to become your brains in a jar."
Tinfoil brain-protecting hats about to gain another use case!
The new skill paradigm shifts technical skills that were typically prioritized, such as proficiency in STEM, which was the most critical skill in 2016, to the least priority in 2023. The reason is that now tools like ChatGPT allow workers to do more with less knowledge, as noted by the report.
By all means, let us replace subject matter experts with large language models and encourage doing more with less knowledge. True innovators will be able to apply this technique in fields that were previously ossified with enormous overhead in safety assurance and risk management, allowing us to finally begin addressing the problem of surplus workforce from the supply side rather than the demand side.
It's not that programming is hard per se. It's that most of these 'introductory' CS courses are designed and paced for students who have significant prior programming experience and familiarity, yielding the same kind of results that you'd get from making an 'intro' calculus class that has no testing or prior coursework requirements.
Sure, students who have had experience with most of the foundational bits will do fine, but the vast majority of the students that don't hit it bounce and never come back. CS departments are just terrible at handling anyone who doesn't want to devote their life to CE/CS.
The vast majority of Gelsinger’s compensation, however, is from stock awards and options. Gelsinger’s base pay was $1.25 million, according to his offer letter, or just under 0.7% of his nearly $179 million in total compensation for 2021
Total employee wages for Intel's ~120,000 employees are ~$12B, chopping the CEO's compensation would allow for a 1.5% raise across the board. For 120,000 people. Gelsinger made 1800x the pay of an average employee last year, anyone who doesn't think this is insane is part of the problem.
"Probably the best operating system in the world is the [operating system] made for the PDP-11 by Bell Laboratories." - Ted Nelson, October 1977