BCBusiness

March 2025 – 30 Under 30

With a mission to inform, empower, celebrate and advocate for British Columbia's current and aspiring business leaders, BCBusiness go behind the headlines and bring readers face to face with the key issues and people driving business in B.C.

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51 B C B U S I N E S S . C A M A R C H 2 0 2 5 O p p o s i t e p a g e : t o p l e f t : J u J a e - y o u n g / S h u t t e r s t o c k ; A n d r e w P a r k : U V i c P h o t o S e r v i c e s that everyone knows about, and then your image models, but then there's a whole constellation of different AI models that try to achieve different things," he explains. Large language models, or LLMs, are trained on enormous amounts of language data to converse in human-like ways. You can ask ChatGPT: "Give me a seven-day itinerary for the Amalfi Coast in April," and it will suggest how to spend a week in Positano, Capri and Sorrento. But that wiz- ardry and the publicity surrounding it over- shadows the business applications of LLMs like ChatGPT and competitors like Google Gemini or Anthropic's Claude. Park points out that LLMs can work on any kind of written text, including software code. "Claude has become so sophisticated in software development now that you can just give it some natural language instruc- tion and say, 'Build me a skeleton of a very basic Twitter competitor,' and it'll give you two to three hundred lines of code. And then you can go in there and start tweak- ing it as you see fit." Indeed, Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai announced in his company's third-quar- ter 2024 earnings call that "more than a quarter of all new code at Google is gen- erated by AI, then reviewed and accepted by engineers." "People don't realize that these LLMs are very specifically disrupting profes- sions and categories of professions," Park emphasizes. "People aren't just using them to, for example, help them with a home- work assignment or write marketing mate- rial or a strategy plan." Software engineer Wilson Scott is focus- ing on his own skills while LLMs move into his industry. He left his law practice in 2021 to earn a computer systems technology diploma at BCIT, enrolling in its artificial intelligence and machine learning option. He graduated in 2023 and works as a soft- ware engineer at Vancouver-based 3D-scan- ning company Polyga Inc. Scott's company doesn't stop him from asking Claude or other LLMs to write or aug- ment his code, but he makes a concerted effort not to use them. He wants to use the practice time. "This is a second career for me, but I am a junior," he explains. "I'm learning about every facet of being a software engineer and I'd like to be doing that firsthand." He thinks he might eventually use AI tools to augment his work and automate some tasks, but only after he's built a deeper understanding of his profession. Scott describes how his BCIT education helped him understand how the artificial intelligence models work, and to see their limitations: "In terms of AI coming for our jobs? I'm not concerned about that, at least not yet." Researcher Aaron Hunter, who is the Mastercard Chair in Digital Trust at BCIT, argues that powerful, productive AI tools will change the nature of digital work— but he's optimistic for employment in the sector. "Maybe there you don't need as many of the software developers doing the same tasks that they were doing before," he explains. "But, overall, we're still predict- ing growth in the industry, because all of these AI tools still need people to work on them, manage them and develop them." +1-250-472-4036 www.uvic.ca/gustavson/executive lmfitter@uvic.ca

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