• How much time is AI reall

    From Mike Powell@1:2320/107 to All on Fri Mar 13 10:45:12 2026
    How much time is AI really saving your workers? Apparently just 16 minutes a week as 'time saved generating content is being absorbed by the time
    required to trust it'

    Date:
    Fri, 13 Mar 2026 11:25:00 +0000

    Description:
    Although AI is savings workers hours per week on actual content generation time, they're spending most of that saved time fact-checking.

    FULL STORY
    Workers and execs are only getting 14-16 minutes of net time savings from AI, report claims
    Most saved time is being spent fact-checking and validating output
    Most executives say they plan on retraining and upskilling workers

    Most execs (89%) and workers (79%) now agree that while AI is improving productivity , but exactly how much time they're saving is up for debate.

    New research from Foxit suggests the real time gains could be minimal
    compared to the potential, simply because of the amount of time workers are having to devote to trusting and understanding AI tools . Per the report's data, execs have only been gaining 16 minutes per week, and workers just 14 minutes, despite AI's bold claims.

    AI isn't actually saving you that much time... yet -- On the flip side,
    execs were spending four hours and 20 minutes validating outputs, with
    workers spending an equally-significant three hours and 50 minutes checking generated content.

    Foxit calls this a 'verification burden', where the time saved by creating content is being offset by fact-checking and making other corrections.

    Even though they're spending more time verifying, 60% of executives say
    they're highly confident in AI outputs, but only around one in three workers are confident. This lack of trust was the second-biggest AI barrier, cited by 34% of workers, with data privacy and security concerns (36%) slightly
    pipping it. Accuracy concerns (25%) were also raised.

    But change could be on the horizon, with nearly three-quarters (72%) of executives focusing on retraining or upskilling employees to handle AI. Are
    you a pro?

    "The next phase of document intelligence wont be defined by more AI features, but by embedding accurate, transparent intelligence directly into workflows," Marketing SVP Evan Reiss wrote, "reducing validation time while keeping
    humans firmly in control."

    Link to news story: https://www.techradar.com/pro/how-much-time-is-ai-really-saving-your-workers-a pparently-just-16-minutes-a-week-as-time-saved-generating-content-is-being-abs orbed-by-the-time-required-to-trust-it

    $$
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  • From Rob Mccart@1:2320/107 to MIKE POWELL on Sun Mar 15 15:51:58 2026
    How much time is AI really saving your workers? Apparently just 16 minutes a
    >week as 'time saved generating content is being absorbed by the time
    >required to trust it'

    On our national news the other night they had an 'expert' on who
    said that AI is putting a lot more stress on the workers and is
    not doing anything close to what is being reported.

    In one case they compared actual total production before AI and
    then again this year with so many using it and the increase in
    production was only 0.4%. (Less than 1/2 of one percent).

    But I can't find that story online now for exact details..
    Most links are to predictions that AI will increase productivity
    by something like 40%, but I assume this story was about that
    not happening.

    It sounded like in general AI was doing more stuff faster, but
    that the end result was greatly slowed down by actual people
    trying to verify the accuracy of what the AI had done, and they
    are stressed like crazy because it's coming in so fast they are
    killing themselves trying to keep on top of it.

    Another story aso went into some of the simplest things that
    AI is terrible at doing. In one example they asked an AI system
    something like how many L's were in the word 'Collectively' and
    it came up with several different answers each time asked.

    ---
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  • From Mike Powell@1:2320/107 to ROB MCCART on Mon Mar 16 10:05:40 2026
    How much time is AI really saving your workers? Apparently just 16 minutes
    >week as 'time saved generating content is being absorbed by the time
    >required to trust it'

    On our national news the other night they had an 'expert' on who
    said that AI is putting a lot more stress on the workers and is
    not doing anything close to what is being reported.

    Yeah, I can see that. I have been using it some recently for a project. Interacting with the claude.ai website has been the least stressful, in
    part because its answers seem more trustworthy.

    Something I have noticed with a few others... when you are about to hit
    your daily/weekly/monthly limit, it will start giving answers that are
    more vague, or "more wrong," causing you to ask it more questions for clarification. I have seen that with at least two models now and suspect
    they do it on purpose to force you to run out.

    That said, claude.ai has yet to do this on a free account.

    In one case they compared actual total production before AI and
    then again this year with so many using it and the increase in
    production was only 0.4%. (Less than 1/2 of one percent).

    I am not too surprised. I think in a lot of fields, management is in a
    rush to save money/time but the fields in question are not ones that AI is aptly suited for yet. As best as I can tell, they are somewhat good at
    coding (some more than others) and are fairly good at helping you find
    other related issues... like translating an unfamiliar compile error... but
    I would not trust them with a whole lot.

    But I can't find that story online now for exact details..
    Most links are to predictions that AI will increase productivity
    by something like 40%, but I assume this story was about that
    not happening.

    That is what the story I posted seemed to be indicating... maybe not that
    exact number but that productivity was expected to go up by a lot but went
    up by a lot less due to trust and verification issues.

    It sounded like in general AI was doing more stuff faster, but
    that the end result was greatly slowed down by actual people
    trying to verify the accuracy of what the AI had done, and they
    are stressed like crazy because it's coming in so fast they are
    killing themselves trying to keep on top of it.

    Yes, and you still very much need to verify the accuracy before just
    following the rules. The other day, I was look an air frier recipe up
    online. Google's AI assistant (Gemini, or whatever you get from them for
    free with a google search) was suggesting that I add oil to the air frier
    pan.

    As I was not trying to make fire, I did not do so!

    I strongly suspect it gets a lot of professional things similarly wrong.
    One thing I particular that I have heard mentioned is that most models are *not* good at counting things. So they might tell you "here are four
    options" but only list three, which immediately makes you question if they
    left an option off or just counted them wrong to begin with.

    Another story aso went into some of the simplest things that
    AI is terrible at doing. In one example they asked an AI system
    something like how many L's were in the word 'Collectively' and
    it came up with several different answers each time asked.

    Yes, that is the one I was referencing above... they have difficulty
    counting things like that which, IMHO, might also make them bad at
    verifying test results.

    Mike

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  • From Max Stubbs@1:103/705 to Mike Powell on Mon Mar 16 11:53:17 2026
    Re: How much time is AI reall
    By: Mike Powell to ROB MCCART on Mon Mar 16 2026 10:05 am

    Yeah color me highly skeptical of any
    of the supposed benefits of AI for the
    average joe, in particular LLMs. I
    personally find those of my coworkers
    who use them do so mindlessly and
    slavishly.

    I still don't know how people can see
    these things hallucinate every third
    answer and think that the results it
    spits out from their prompts are
    flawless nd unimpeachable. Blows my
    mind.

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  • From Mike Powell@1:2320/107 to MAX STUBBS on Tue Mar 17 09:52:40 2026
    Yeah color me highly skeptical of any of the supposed benefits of AI for the average joe, in particular LLMs. I personally find those of my coworkers who use them do so mindlessly and slavishly.

    I am skeptical about many AI claims. Today, I started to post an article
    here where a CEO was claiming that AI was going to take over the customer service market and put most customer service reps out of their jobs.

    However, as I read it, I realized that this CEO is the leader of a company
    that is selling that actual service -- replacing human customer service
    workers with AI -- so of course he would say that. It was really a fluff
    piece for his business. :(


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  • From Max Stubbs@1:103/705 to Mike Powell on Tue Mar 17 10:10:04 2026
    Re: How much time is AI reall
    By: Mike Powell to MAX STUBBS on Tue Mar 17 2026 09:52 am

    Nailed it. The "AI" industry is a lot
    of smoke, mirrors, grift, infringement,
    and outright corruption. I'm not saying
    the tech isn't going to revolutionize
    the industry; I'm just saying it's
    going to blow up in our faces first.


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