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AI Automation Society

423.5k members • Free

Amplify AI [for business]

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Grow with Alex

2.9k members • Free

4 contributions to AI Automation Society
Sol 5.6 ultra vs. Fable 5: who is the winner?
With Fable 5 rolling out of standard subscription plans next week while openai keeps Sol 5.6 Ultra accessible, the whole landscape is shifting. It’s making me look at my own setups and I wonder whether to keep my GPT subscription or not. On raw performance alone, who actually wins this battle for you? Where does one drop the ball where the other shines? I would be extremely grateful for your viewpoints.
Is it still worth learning n8n?
I’ve been getting this question a lot lately. With AI automations becoming easier to build with AI, and OpenAI releasing AgentKit, people are wondering if n8n is even worth learning anymore. But here’s the truth: if I had to start all over again knowing nothing, I’d still learn everything I could about n8n. Because when you learn n8n, you’re not just learning one tool, you’re learning how systems think. You start to see how triggers connect, how data flows, and how logic turns into results. And once you understand that, you can jump to any platform in the world and master it instantly. You become tool-agnostic, and that’s where the real freedom lies. When you learn how to build workflows yourself, you also learn lessons that can’t be taught through flashy AI demos. You start to see what automations can really do, how reliable AI actually is, and what’s possible when you combine logic with creativity. You learn how to build systems that save time, cut costs, and actually work in the real world, not just on paper. That skill separates you from everyone else trying to sell the same thing. Because when clients hire you, they’re not hiring you to drag nodes on a screen, they’re hiring you to think like an automator. They want someone who understands the logic behind the system, can identify what’s going wrong, and knows how to make it better. The people who skip this step, the ones relying entirely on “AI agents that build workflows for you”, are like someone trying to sell a cake after only seeing a picture of it. They don’t know the ingredients, how it was baked, or even the flavor. So when they try to explain it to others, they sound the same as everyone else. But when you’ve actually baked the cake yourself, you can describe the flavor, the texture, the process, and that builds trust. And in this space, trust is everything. Automation is one of the few skills in the world that directly compounds over time. Once you know how to identify bottlenecks, map processes, and connect systems, you can apply that skill to any business or industry. And the ROI is real, recent studies by Deloitte and McKinsey show companies that invest in automation see up to a 30% reduction in operating costs and often double or triple their productivity within months. The people who understand how to build and maintain these systems are the ones leading that transformation.
Is it still worth learning n8n?
0 likes • 15h
Here is the tension I’m looking at right now: AI models are increasingly commoditized, and intelligence itself is cheap. The actual value has shifted entirely to infrastructure and orchestration—connecting the "brain in a jar" to legacy CRMs, custom databases, and API webhooks without infinite loops or runaway API costs. Tools like n8n excel at bare-metal control, handling non-standard data transformations, and mixing deterministic logic with AI nodes. But with the rise of vibe-coding, MCPs (Model Context Protocol), and native LLM code generation, the technical ceiling has shifted. Does it still make sense to spend 10+ hours mastering n8n's logic architecture nowadays, or is the edge moving toward pure programmatic deployments guided by LLMs? Curious to hear where the builders here are placing their bets for actual production reliability.
💬 Discussion Post: Your First Time Using AI
Let’s take it back to the very beginning... What was your very first experience using AI? Was it ChatGPT? Midjourney? Some random AI voice assistant you asked about the weather in 2021? Here are a few prompts to get you going: - What tool did you use first, and why did you try it? - What did you think was happening behind the scenes? - Were you blown away? Confused? Skeptical?
💬 Discussion Post: Your First Time Using AI
0 likes • 15h
My first AI was 'jasper.ai' as I was learning about marketing I wanted to use it for content creation. Looking back I have to smile because when it was prompted (from an existing prompt library) the text was so-la-la and all I knew was to press REWRITE button which gave me same variations of low-mediocre every time. LOL Now I know better! :-) Did anyone here use jasper. ai back in 2023?
Welcome! Introduce yourself + share a career goal you have 🎉
Let's get to know each other! Comment below sharing where you are in the world, a career goal you have, and something you like to do for fun. 😊
6 likes • 16h
Hi all, I’m an AI power user and builder, and I’m joining this community to bridge the gap between my current operational workflows and the new opportunities I can unlock by expanding how I build with AI. I’m eager to pressure-test my existing frameworks, learn from the advanced technical strategies here, and trade notes with peers focused on high-leverage execution.
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@elizabeth-stief-7793
Guiding mid-career women to discover fulfilling work, to confidently leave stagnant job by addressing doubts and to pivot with a clear plan & low risk

Active 2h ago
Joined Jun 4, 2026
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