Close Menu

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Toy Testing with a Discerning Bodega Cat

    The UK has a chance to pioneer pornography regulation – it must take it | Susanna Rustin

    “The Thinking Machine,” AI, Higher Ed Professional Staff Work

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Facebook X (Twitter) YouTube LinkedIn
    Naija Global News |
    Tuesday, March 31
    • Business
    • Health
    • Politics
    • Science
    • Sports
    • Education
    • Social Issues
    • Technology
    • More
      • Crime & Justice
      • Environment
      • Entertainment
    Naija Global News |
    You are at:Home»Education»“The Thinking Machine,” AI, Higher Ed Professional Staff Work
    Education

    “The Thinking Machine,” AI, Higher Ed Professional Staff Work

    onlyplanz_80y6mtBy onlyplanz_80y6mtMarch 31, 2026004 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    “The Thinking Machine,” AI, Higher Ed Professional Staff Work
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    The Thinking Machine: Jensen Huang, Nvidia, and the World’s Most Coveted Microchip by Stephen Witt

    Published in April 2025

    AI hadn’t really changed how I work until my institution partnered with Anthropic and I got access to Claude Cowork. While experimenting with Cowork, I read The Thinking Machine.

    The book is not about how AI will change higher education. While The Thinking Machine talks about the impact of the release of ChatGPT on Nov. 30, 2022 (“Students realized they could use it to write essays and homework was forever obsolete” p. 191), The Thinking Machine provides no insights into AI and the future of the university.

    And yet, if we want a book to spark conversation about the future of professional staff work in higher education, then The Thinking Machine is an excellent choice.

    Note that I’m restricting this AI–and–book reading recommendation to university professional staff work. There is plenty of conversation about AI and the future of teaching and learning and too little discussion about how AI will change professional academic staff work.

    If my experience with Claude Cowork is generalizable, then academic professional staff work is about to undergo a radical shift. Since I started to integrate Cowork into my workflows, AI has become the medium in which I manipulate information. Spreadsheets, decks and documents are now developed, edited and refined collaboratively with Claude.

    The process of discovering, synthesizing and adding value to information—the work of the academic staff laptop class—now almost always includes AI in the loop.

    Once you start to work with AI to do knowledge work, you want more AI. The challenge becomes not finding ways to apply the tools, but running out of usage tokens. The scarcity is not potential productivity, but compute.

    Upon complaining to a friend at my institution who works in IT about running up against my weekly Claude usage limits, he wrote back joking that a “small town in North Carolina is expecting rain that they can use to cook dinner since the diversion of local water supplies to Anthropic to cool servers just for you.”

    The technological infrastructure that is changing the work of higher ed professional staff is, of course, NVIDIA’s GPU chips. The Thinking Machine tells the story of how NVIDIA’s advances in GPUs and parallel processing massively paid off when companies like OpenAI began to utilize these chips to train their deep learning models. Where NVIDIA’s business was once focused on supplying hardware for high-powered gaming PCs and on niche design and research markets, its chips are now optimized (and highly sought after) for the massive data centers that train and run the most advanced AI models.

    The author of The Thinking Machine, Stephen Witt, approaches the subject with a deep concern about what AI will do to work (and his work as a writer). One of the themes of the book is Witt’s attempt to understand why NVIDIA’s co-founder and CEO, Jensen Huang, is so unconcerned about AI’s potential negative impact on society. And why is someone like Geoffrey Hinton (who received a Nobel Prize for his pioneering work on neural networks and machine learning) so worried?

    Witt is a fantastic writer. His 2015 book How Music Got Free changed how I thought about Napster, iTunes and the collapse of the legacy music industry. Reading The Thinking Machine hasn’t changed how I think about AI. Instead, I have been intensively using AI in my work, which has changed my thinking. But the book has helped me understand the infrastructure on which AI depends and the company (NVIDIA) and its CEO (Huang) at the center of this technological revolution.

    If higher ed professional staff choose to read The Thinking Machine, we may wonder which of our jobs will not only be supplemented and complemented by AI but also replaced. And we might end up talking about the future, where any funding for hiring new academic staff or knowledge jobs must be accompanied by a justification for why that role can’t be accomplished with existing resources and AI.

    What are you reading?

    Higher Machine Professional staff thinking work
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Previous ArticleBMA to ballot senior doctors in England over strikes as pay dispute escalates | Doctors
    Next Article The UK has a chance to pioneer pornography regulation – it must take it | Susanna Rustin
    onlyplanz_80y6mt
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Toy Testing with a Discerning Bodega Cat

    March 31, 2026

    Graduate School Pays Off for Pharmacists, Not Psychologists

    March 31, 2026

    No, Higher Ed Mergers Have Never Been Strategic (column)

    March 31, 2026
    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    Watch Lady Gaga’s Perform ‘Vanish Into You’ on ‘Colbert’

    September 9, 20251 Views

    Advertisers flock to Fox seeking an ‘audience of one’ — Donald Trump

    July 13, 20251 Views

    A Setback for Maine’s Free Community College Program

    June 19, 20251 Views
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
    • TikTok
    • WhatsApp
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    Latest Reviews

    At Chile’s Vera Rubin Observatory, Earth’s Largest Camera Surveys the Sky

    By onlyplanz_80y6mtJune 19, 2025

    SpaceX Starship Explodes Before Test Fire

    By onlyplanz_80y6mtJune 19, 2025

    How the L.A. Port got hit by Trump’s Tariffs

    By onlyplanz_80y6mtJune 19, 2025

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest tech news from FooBar about tech, design and biz.

    Most Popular

    Watch Lady Gaga’s Perform ‘Vanish Into You’ on ‘Colbert’

    September 9, 20251 Views

    Advertisers flock to Fox seeking an ‘audience of one’ — Donald Trump

    July 13, 20251 Views

    A Setback for Maine’s Free Community College Program

    June 19, 20251 Views
    Our Picks

    Toy Testing with a Discerning Bodega Cat

    The UK has a chance to pioneer pornography regulation – it must take it | Susanna Rustin

    “The Thinking Machine,” AI, Higher Ed Professional Staff Work

    Recent Posts
    • Toy Testing with a Discerning Bodega Cat
    • The UK has a chance to pioneer pornography regulation – it must take it | Susanna Rustin
    • “The Thinking Machine,” AI, Higher Ed Professional Staff Work
    • BMA to ballot senior doctors in England over strikes as pay dispute escalates | Doctors
    • U.S. Gas Prices Top $4 a Gallon
    © 2026 naijaglobalnews. Designed by Pro.
    • About Us
    • Disclaimer
    • Get In Touch
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.