
u/Beautiful-Area1518

I made this poster using an LLM (large language model / generative AI).
But "using" is the key word here.
I'm a graphic designer. It's my job. My eye, my art direction, my retouching, my composition choices — no prompt generates any of that on its own. AI is a tool. Powerful, impressive, sometimes frustrating — but a tool. And like any tool, what matters is who's holding it and how they use it.
We heard the exact same thing when Photoshop came along: "That's not art, that's just a computer doing it." People pitted painters against graphic designers, as if mastering software somehow canceled out talent. That was wrong then. It's wrong now.
AI is not garbage. It's not magic either. It's a new brush. But you still need to know how to paint.
Will my job be fully replaced in 5, 10, or 20 years? Maybe. Probably, even — at least in its current form. But the day machines do all the work for us… we'll still have the joy of creating. We'll keep drawing, composing, imagining — not out of necessity, but out of passion.
And when you think about it… isn't that exactly the universe Gene Roddenberry envisioned? A world where technology frees humanity instead of enslaving it. Where people no longer work to survive, but to fulfill themselves.
Star Trek turns 60. And its message has never been more relevant.
🖖 Live long and prosper.
According to you, what would be the best title for this movie, and what pitch would you imagine for a crossover between Star Trek and The Matrix?