open.spotify.com/episode/0updeiT8DIuJNlz3EdKGVr

Preview meta tags from the open.spotify.com website.

Linked Hostnames

1

Thumbnail

Search Engine Appearance

Google

https://open.spotify.com/episode/0updeiT8DIuJNlz3EdKGVr

The Lazy Generation? Is AI Killing Jobs or Critical Thinking

Listen to this episode from Digital Disruption with Geoff Nielson on Spotify. Can automation and critical thinking coexist in the future of education and work?Today on Digital Disruption, we’re joined by Bryan Walsh the Senior Editorial Director at Vox.At Vox, Bryan leads the Future Perfect and climate teams and oversees the podcasts Unexplainable and The Gray Area. He also serves as editor of Vox’s Future Perfect section, which explores the policies, people, and ideas that could shape a better future for everyone. He is the author of End Times: A Brief Guide to the End of the World (2019), a book on existential risks including AI, pandemics, and nuclear war though, as he notes, it’s not all that brief. Before joining Vox, Bryan spent 15 years at Time magazine as a foreign correspondent in Hong Kong and Tokyo, an environment writer, and international editor. He later served as Future Correspondent at Axios. When he’s not editing, Bryan writes Vox’s Good News newsletter and covers topics ranging from population trends and scientific progress to climate change, artificial intelligence, and on occasion children’s television.Bryan sits down with Geoff to discuss how artificial intelligence is transforming the workplace and what it means for workers, students, and leaders. From the automation of entry-level jobs to the growing importance of human-centered skills, Bryan shares his perspective on the short- and long-term impact of AI on the economy and society. He explains why younger workers may be hit hardest, how education systems must adapt to preserve critical thinking, and why both companies and governments face tough choices in managing disruption. This conversation highlights why adaptability and critical thinking are becoming the most valuable skills and what governments and organizations can do to reduce the social and economic strain of rapid automation.In this video:00:00 Intro 01:20 Early adoption of AI: Hype vs. reality02:16 Automation pressures during economic downturns03:08 The struggle for new grads entering the workforce04:37 Is AI wiping out entry-level jobs?05:40 Why younger workers may be hit hardest06:28 No clear answers on AI disruption08:19 The paradox of AI: productivity gains vs. job losses14:30 Critical thinking, education, and the future of learning18:00 How AI reshapes global power dynamics31:57 The workplace of the future: skills that matter most44:03 Regulation, politics, and the AI economy48:19 AI, geopolitics, and risks of global instability57:33 Who bears responsibility for minimizing disruption?59:01 Rethinking identity beyond work1:00:22 Journalism in the AI era: threat or amplifier?Connect with Bryan:Website: https://www.vox.com/authors/bryan-walshLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/bryan-walsh-9881b0/X: https://x.com/bryanrwalshVisit our website: https://www.infotech.com/Follow us on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@InfoTechRG



Bing

The Lazy Generation? Is AI Killing Jobs or Critical Thinking

https://open.spotify.com/episode/0updeiT8DIuJNlz3EdKGVr

Listen to this episode from Digital Disruption with Geoff Nielson on Spotify. Can automation and critical thinking coexist in the future of education and work?Today on Digital Disruption, we’re joined by Bryan Walsh the Senior Editorial Director at Vox.At Vox, Bryan leads the Future Perfect and climate teams and oversees the podcasts Unexplainable and The Gray Area. He also serves as editor of Vox’s Future Perfect section, which explores the policies, people, and ideas that could shape a better future for everyone. He is the author of End Times: A Brief Guide to the End of the World (2019), a book on existential risks including AI, pandemics, and nuclear war though, as he notes, it’s not all that brief. Before joining Vox, Bryan spent 15 years at Time magazine as a foreign correspondent in Hong Kong and Tokyo, an environment writer, and international editor. He later served as Future Correspondent at Axios. When he’s not editing, Bryan writes Vox’s Good News newsletter and covers topics ranging from population trends and scientific progress to climate change, artificial intelligence, and on occasion children’s television.Bryan sits down with Geoff to discuss how artificial intelligence is transforming the workplace and what it means for workers, students, and leaders. From the automation of entry-level jobs to the growing importance of human-centered skills, Bryan shares his perspective on the short- and long-term impact of AI on the economy and society. He explains why younger workers may be hit hardest, how education systems must adapt to preserve critical thinking, and why both companies and governments face tough choices in managing disruption. This conversation highlights why adaptability and critical thinking are becoming the most valuable skills and what governments and organizations can do to reduce the social and economic strain of rapid automation.In this video:00:00 Intro 01:20 Early adoption of AI: Hype vs. reality02:16 Automation pressures during economic downturns03:08 The struggle for new grads entering the workforce04:37 Is AI wiping out entry-level jobs?05:40 Why younger workers may be hit hardest06:28 No clear answers on AI disruption08:19 The paradox of AI: productivity gains vs. job losses14:30 Critical thinking, education, and the future of learning18:00 How AI reshapes global power dynamics31:57 The workplace of the future: skills that matter most44:03 Regulation, politics, and the AI economy48:19 AI, geopolitics, and risks of global instability57:33 Who bears responsibility for minimizing disruption?59:01 Rethinking identity beyond work1:00:22 Journalism in the AI era: threat or amplifier?Connect with Bryan:Website: https://www.vox.com/authors/bryan-walshLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/bryan-walsh-9881b0/X: https://x.com/bryanrwalshVisit our website: https://www.infotech.com/Follow us on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@InfoTechRG



DuckDuckGo

https://open.spotify.com/episode/0updeiT8DIuJNlz3EdKGVr

The Lazy Generation? Is AI Killing Jobs or Critical Thinking

Listen to this episode from Digital Disruption with Geoff Nielson on Spotify. Can automation and critical thinking coexist in the future of education and work?Today on Digital Disruption, we’re joined by Bryan Walsh the Senior Editorial Director at Vox.At Vox, Bryan leads the Future Perfect and climate teams and oversees the podcasts Unexplainable and The Gray Area. He also serves as editor of Vox’s Future Perfect section, which explores the policies, people, and ideas that could shape a better future for everyone. He is the author of End Times: A Brief Guide to the End of the World (2019), a book on existential risks including AI, pandemics, and nuclear war though, as he notes, it’s not all that brief. Before joining Vox, Bryan spent 15 years at Time magazine as a foreign correspondent in Hong Kong and Tokyo, an environment writer, and international editor. He later served as Future Correspondent at Axios. When he’s not editing, Bryan writes Vox’s Good News newsletter and covers topics ranging from population trends and scientific progress to climate change, artificial intelligence, and on occasion children’s television.Bryan sits down with Geoff to discuss how artificial intelligence is transforming the workplace and what it means for workers, students, and leaders. From the automation of entry-level jobs to the growing importance of human-centered skills, Bryan shares his perspective on the short- and long-term impact of AI on the economy and society. He explains why younger workers may be hit hardest, how education systems must adapt to preserve critical thinking, and why both companies and governments face tough choices in managing disruption. This conversation highlights why adaptability and critical thinking are becoming the most valuable skills and what governments and organizations can do to reduce the social and economic strain of rapid automation.In this video:00:00 Intro 01:20 Early adoption of AI: Hype vs. reality02:16 Automation pressures during economic downturns03:08 The struggle for new grads entering the workforce04:37 Is AI wiping out entry-level jobs?05:40 Why younger workers may be hit hardest06:28 No clear answers on AI disruption08:19 The paradox of AI: productivity gains vs. job losses14:30 Critical thinking, education, and the future of learning18:00 How AI reshapes global power dynamics31:57 The workplace of the future: skills that matter most44:03 Regulation, politics, and the AI economy48:19 AI, geopolitics, and risks of global instability57:33 Who bears responsibility for minimizing disruption?59:01 Rethinking identity beyond work1:00:22 Journalism in the AI era: threat or amplifier?Connect with Bryan:Website: https://www.vox.com/authors/bryan-walshLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/bryan-walsh-9881b0/X: https://x.com/bryanrwalshVisit our website: https://www.infotech.com/Follow us on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@InfoTechRG

  • General Meta Tags

    15
    • title
      The Lazy Generation? Is AI Killing Jobs or Critical Thinking - Digital Disruption with Geoff Nielson | Podcast on Spotify
    • charset
      utf-8
    • X-UA-Compatible
      IE=9
    • viewport
      width=device-width, initial-scale=1
    • fb:app_id
      174829003346
  • Open Graph Meta Tags

    154
    • og:site_name
      Spotify
    • og:title
      The Lazy Generation? Is AI Killing Jobs or Critical Thinking
    • og:description
      Digital Disruption with Geoff Nielson · Episode
    • og:url
      https://open.spotify.com/episode/0updeiT8DIuJNlz3EdKGVr
    • og:type
      music.song
  • Twitter Meta Tags

    5
    • twitter:site
      @spotify
    • twitter:title
      The Lazy Generation? Is AI Killing Jobs or Critical Thinking
    • twitter:description
      Digital Disruption with Geoff Nielson · Episode
    • twitter:image
      https://image-cdn-ak.spotifycdn.com/image/ab6772ab00001692938762e267990d93046c3e03
    • twitter:card
      summary
  • Link Tags

    31
    • alternate
      https://open.spotify.com/oembed?url=https%3A%2F%2Fopen.spotify.com%2Fepisode%2F0updeiT8DIuJNlz3EdKGVr
    • alternate
      android-app://com.spotify.music/spotify/episode/0updeiT8DIuJNlz3EdKGVr
    • canonical
      https://open.spotify.com/episode/0updeiT8DIuJNlz3EdKGVr
    • icon
      https://open.spotifycdn.com/cdn/images/favicon32.b64ecc03.png
    • icon
      https://open.spotifycdn.com/cdn/images/favicon16.1c487bff.png
  • Website Locales

    2
    • EN country flagen
      https://open.spotify.com/episode/0updeiT8DIuJNlz3EdKGVr
    • DEFAULT country flagx-default
      https://open.spotify.com/episode/0updeiT8DIuJNlz3EdKGVr

Links

9