What are people using AI for?

PeerTube
How AI coding agents work—and what to remember if you use them

From compression tricks to multi-agent teamwork, here's what makes them tick.

Ars Technica

❌Junior roles thin out. Mid-tier judgement grows. Senior decisions tighten the whole system.
If you want to see how these shifts actually play out in real workplaces, the new piece breaks it down clearly.

#FutureOfWork #Careers #AIWork #WorkforceLens

https://zurl.co/eWUqi

How the structure of future careers will look in an AI-heavy labour market

Discover how AI is compressing career ladders: entry roles shrink, mid-tier judgement expands, and senior power concentrates. Learn skills, strategies, and sector shifts to thrive in the future of work.

The Workforce Lens’s Substack
How OpenAI is using GPT-5 Codex to improve the AI tool itself

“The vast majority of Codex is built by Codex,” OpenAI told us about its new AI coding agent.

Ars Technica
Back on the road to the big city again. This time to work with AI and compliance. I have asked the question of what is required of an official when they start using AI to a greater extent. What is the need for proprietary applications versus purchased ones. In an international context, the questions become 1000 times more complex.

I have my camera with me, but it will probably be a lot of mobile photography today and tomorrow. #AI #Compliance #AIGovernance #AIwork #InternationalContext #EntArch #InfoArch #BigCity
How to use AI-written code in without intellectual property issues

If you're going to use AI at work, you'd better be sure the code it writes doesn't put your business at risk

The AI-Augmented Engineer
Developers joke about “coding like cavemen” as AI service suffers major outage

Anthropic outage takes down AI tools some developers rely on to create software.

Ars Technica
ChatGPT’s new AI agent can browse the web and create PowerPoint slideshows

New “agentic” AI feature combines web browsing with task-execution abilities.

Ars Technica
The résumé is dying, and AI is holding the smoking gun

As thousands of applications flood job posts, ‘hiring slop’ is kicking off an AI arms race.

Ars Technica