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Day to day, she coaxes AI models like OpenAI's GPT, utilizing natural language to manipulate the model into spitting out exactly the content she wants. "I just find it really interesting, really fun — it's like solving a word puzzle," Daniel, whose résumé also includes a prompt engineering role at LinkedIn, said. AdvertisementDaniel is part of a wave of a new kind of AI engineers — those without formal tech skills. AdvertisementDemand for prompt engineers has been skyrocketing amid the AI hype, and salaries are echoing the excitement. "I think different standards will emerge between what everybody can do and what the expert prompting engineers can do," she said.
Persons: , Kelly Daniel, Daniel, Lazarus, Tanya Thomas, Thomas, Antropic, OpenAI's ChatGPT, Critics, Conor Grennan, Grennan, Rick Battle, Teja, Vasudev Lal, Lal, Yinuo Chen, Chen, there'll, Mark Zuckerberg's, she's Organizations: Service, LinkedIn, Google, NYU Stern School of Business, VMware, Intel Labs, Meta Locations: Beijing
"I was literally living under the poverty line for like four years, but it was a good experience," he says. Hassam Sheikh, 33, earns about $250,000 per year as an AI research scientist. In May 2020, Sheikh began an internship at Intel Labs that would, about seven months later, turn into a full-time gig as a research scientist. In addition to his $187,000 annual base salary, Sheikh receives bonuses and stock compensation which, in 2023, have him on track to earn about $250,000. When he's not working on machine learning, he's likely working around the house.
Persons: Hassam Sheikh's, didn't, Sheikh, , Hassam Sheikh, Clint Boland, I've, hasn't, Deborah Donatella, Diana Wintour —, Sheikh stashes, he's, it's, there's Organizations: CNBC, University of Central, Intel Labs, University of Lahore, University of Manchester, Intel, UCF, Amazon Music, Walmart, Home, Michelin Locations: Orlando , Florida, University of Central Florida, That's, Lahore, Pakistan, Orlando, United States
Kairan Quazi, who's only 14, has landed a job at SpaceX as a software engineer for Starlink. He'll still need his mom to drive him to work until he's old enough to get a license himself. Quazi told Insider he wants other companies to be aware of "biases" in their hiring policies. Kairan Quazi may have landed a job at SpaceX as a software engineer – but he's still going to need his mom to drive him to work. Quazi told Insider: "My mom's going to have to drop me off until I can start driving."
Persons: Kairan, Quazi, he's, Lisa Robinson, I've Organizations: SpaceX, Elon Musk's, Santa Clara University, Intel Labs, LinkedIn Locations: Pleasanton , California, Redmond , Washington, American
SpaceX has hired a young prodigy to join its Starlink division as a software engineer. The latest recruit at SpaceX is a software engineer who passed its "technically challenging" and "fun" interview process. He's planning to make the move from Pleasanton, California with his mother to start work at SpaceX in Redmond, Washington, per the report. "I felt like I was learning at the level that I was meant to learn," he told the LA Times. Starlink is SpaceX's satellite internet service and started operating in January in Nigeria – its first African market.
Persons: Santa Clara University's, he'd, BrainGain, Quazi, Starlink Organizations: SpaceX, Santa Clara University, Morning, Santa Clara, Seattle Times, Los Angeles Times, LA Times, Intel Labs, ABC7, Nigeria – Locations: California, Santa, Pleasanton , California, Redmond , Washington, Nigeria
The platform, called Intel Quantum SDK, would for now allow those algorithms to run on a simulated quantum computing system, said Anne Matsuura, Intel Labs' head of quantum applications and architecture. Quantum computing is based on quantum physics and in theory can perform calculations quicker than conventional computers. Matsuura said developers can use the long-established programming language C++ to build quantum algorithms, making it more accessible for people without quantum computing expertise. "The Intel Quantum SDK helps programmers get ready for future large-scale commercial quantum computers," Matsuura said in a statement. Qubits, or quantum bits, are the basic unit of quantum computing.
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