Teacher Wang Chuan @Svwang1's words have given me new inspiration!
“The bitter lesson” talks about a very simple but repeatedly verified principle:
Any problem that can be solved through scalable computation and data-driven approaches will eventually overshadow those that rely on human fine design and experiential skills.
In other words, many abilities you think you must master personally are actually just temporary products;
once stronger computing power, larger data, and more generalized models emerge, these abilities will be collectively packaged into an interface that you can directly call upon.
If you are still learning along old paths, you are essentially repeating a process that is constantly becoming outdated; they are rapidly turning into low-barrier capabilities.
Thus, a disconnection will occur: you are becoming stronger, but your competitiveness is still weakening!
Unless you no longer need to acquire abilities through learning paths, but instead stand directly on the results to judge the direction!
At this point, the saying “if you learn slowly, you might as well stop learning” becomes valid.

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