如何在2026年生存于科技行业
How to Survive in the Tech industry in 2026

原始链接: https://blog.phuaxueyong.com/post/2026-03-23-how-to-survive-tech-in-2026/

## 驾驭人工智能革命:以人为本的方法 (2026) 随着人工智能迅速重塑世界,尤其是在科技领域,重新关注人类独有的优势至关重要。这种转变类似于汽车的出现——仅仅在新工具上坚持旧方法(“骑马”)行不通,反而会阻碍进步。 为了蓬勃发展,技术人员应优先考虑**商业头脑**,理解利益相关者的关系,并通过持续的积极互动建立牢固的“情感储蓄”。 **跨职能团队**——具备用户体验理解的工程师,具备商业意识的设计师——对于精简执行和保持一致性至关重要。 至关重要的是,**日常人工智能整合**并非捷径,而是战略性使用时的强大助手。与此同时,通过**与人建立联系**,在需要帮助之前主动提供帮助并建立真诚的关系,来培养强大的人脉网络。最后,拥抱**持续的好奇心**——终身学习在这个快速发展的领域至关重要,抵制即时满足的诱惑,并培养对不断发展技术的更深入理解。 这些原则并非追逐潮流,而是关于建立有韧性、适应性强的技能组合,以及专注于长期发展的充实职业生涯。

一场 Hacker News 的讨论围绕一篇关于在 2026 年生存于科技行业的新文章展开,重点关注人工智能的影响。虽然原文主要提供一般的职业建议,但评论者们集中讨论了人工智能的潜在缺点。 一个主要担忧是,过度依赖人工智能可能会阻碍对问题领域的根本理解,从而形成一个恶性循环,使人们更难有效地*使用*人工智能。另一位用户强烈批评了人工智能的更广泛影响,提到了环境问题(巨大的能源消耗、资源枯竭)和社会问题(劳工剥削、数据盗窃以及低质量产出/臃肿软件的泛滥)。 最后,一位评论员指出,每个人都需要以高级别的姿态运作,指导那些缺乏关键商业和人际交往技能的人——技能发展加速,原本需要长时间积累的经验现在需要快速掌握。
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原文

It has been three months into 2026, and ChatGPT has evolved since 2022. We have seen AI take the world by storm. This reflection piece attempts to remind us of our motive and value proposition as humans in an AI-shaped world.

Without a doubt, AI will sit in the economic driver’s seat, and our old ways will become “the horse.” If you have a horse, as with any industrial revolution, the automobile is coming. You will need new skills to navigate your new vehicle.

Please do not try to horse-ride in your car—that is, doing the same work in the same way with new tools. Two things happen: (1) the car will not move, and we wonder why the technology “does not work for me,” and (2) you will look silly trying.

ChatGPT versions over time Credit to Nexos.ai

This article lays out a few levers that can help you as a technologist stand apart from the crowd.




1. Whatever the role, good business acumen is your x10 leverage

If you have a small budget but need x10 impact this year, that is what the business is asking for. Find people who understand that and run with them.

Every success involves stakeholders; part of good business acumen is understanding social capital.

If you are in a relationship with another person—personal, professional, or partnership—you hold an emotional bank account with that person. That is a fact, and it cannot be ignored. Strong social capital buys more benefit of the doubt when things get rough; safety rises when social capital is high. Trust thrives only in a safe environment.

With every bank account there are withdrawals and deposits. Go the extra mile and grab an extra coffee for a colleague on the way to work—that might be a ten-cent deposit.

But when we talk behind someone’s back in a conflict, we can wipe the account with something closer to a hundred-dollar withdrawal.

Withdrawals are in dollars and tens of dollars; most deposits come in cents. That may be why they say trust takes years to build and seconds to destroy.


2. You need a team that can wear multiple hats

Engineers with UX and business mindsets.

Designers with commercial awareness and technical understanding.

PMs who can engage with project managers.

It is not about taking one another’s jobs. It is about the team spending more time in sync: you understand what the other side needs in a discussion. You spend less time “syncing” and more time executing.

The key concept here is alignment.


3. Use AI daily

AI is not a shortcut—not if you do the work to understand requirements and the steps to your desired outcome.

AI can be a strong assistant when you use it for specialised tasks. If you give the model a clear role, you can get more specialist-like output.

If you resist AI, it helps to ask why—the fear of the unknown, the fear of being replaced. Whatever it is, you gain more from naming it than from burying your head in the sand, pretending the wave is only a passing storm.


4. Spend more time away from the screen and meet real people

Nobody likes people who only show up when they want something, so build your network before you need it. Go to meetups and events. Offer help. Offer introductions. Learn to be a connector

The power of connectors is beautifully captured by Malcolm Gladwell:


“The point about connectors is that by having a foot in so many different worlds, they have the effect of bringing them all together.”


5. Be deeply curious about what is happening around you

Cultivate a strong desire to stay curious.

Technology is moving so fast that “finished” learning is no longer the goal. It is wiser to treat knowing as a journey: a daily practice of learning a bit more about what interests you.

Knowledge flows more freely, and there is more noise. Even through the noise, if it is a topic you enjoy exploring, it is rarely wasted—you are a little more knowledgeable about something you care about. Time spent enjoying the process is not wasted.

That depth of curiosity will distinguish you in an era of short attention spans. Social media has tried to short-circuit our dopamine systems so we get quick rewards for little effort—a new video tailored to our tastes, whether for education or distraction, at the swipe of a thumb. It is rarer now for people to sit still without the urge to scroll or chase another dopamine hit.

Growing that curiosity is like a journey through the desert—a dry, boring stretch with no easy stream of water or dopamine. Yet the change often starts there.




TL;DR

These paradigms in a fast-changing tech world have helped me stay grounded instead of chasing every headline. They have helped me keep my sail aimed at a better version of myself—one I can be proud of five to ten years from now.

I hope you find something like that for yourself too.


Reference

Surviving 2025 as a Product Manager (or Anyone in Tech, Really)

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