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I backed up your comment on the basis of 40 plus years in medicine. (Only 200 hours on DH Chipmunks in University Air Squadron (RAFVR) so didn't use the aviation one. They had nothing in the way of electronics other than a radio! In medicine the progress thanks to AI has been phenomenal. When I qualified in 1968 even an ECG machine was valve powered, took 15 minutes to warm up and you had to switch off any fluorescent lights to minimise interference. Now they read the tracing and tell you exactly what the problems is.I agree -- it's just I have more experience in flying (have a ppl) and engineering than medicine. AI also has allowed robots to perform surgery remotely (with the assistance of a human "operator". This could be a real gain changer in places where hospitals are far away / hard to reach or in places like the UK where the health services nearly always seem to be running in "fire drill mode" at near 100% of capacity.
cheers
jimbo
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