AI Replaces Trainer Explains Everything
A worker sits with an AI-driven training screen while another person observes, illustrating automated instruction replacing human guidance.
Getting trained used to mean learning from someone who knew what they were doing. Now it means reading whatever the system decides you should know.
AI, automation, and smart systems promise efficiency, but they often replace clarity with confidence. Training programs, onboarding tools, and workplace apps now rely on algorithms to deliver information, even when that information feels generic, incomplete, or oddly specific in the wrong ways. You’re not learning—you’re being processed. It’s the same kind of system logic where everything technically works, just not in a way that helps you (see Turn It Off And On Again — https://www.chadgeepeety.com/cartoons/turn-it-off-reboot-fix).
Modern digital workplaces depend on apps, AI assistants, and automated training modules to scale knowledge. But instead of real guidance, you get screens, prompts, and instructions that assume you already understand the problem. When something goes wrong, there’s no person—just more steps, more menus, and more confidence from the system that it’s doing its job. Meanwhile, you’re left trying to interpret instructions that feel like they were written for someone else entirely.
At this point, AI training isn’t about understanding—it’s about exposure.
If the system explains everything but you still don’t get it, that’s not confusion. That’s completion (see Software Updates Fix Nothing — https://www.chadgeepeety.com/cartoons/software-updates-fix-nothing).
Explore more Chad Geepeety™ cartoons about AI, tech, and the everyday problems that upgrades somehow make worse.