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<title>Remote IT Jobs | Find Remote Tech Jobs Worldwide</title>
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<category>Bitcoin News</category>
<item>
<title><![CDATA[Tech Workers Ignoring AI Face Triple the Layoff Risk, Gallup Reveals]]></title>
<link>https://www.remoteitjobs.app/article/tech-workers-ignoring-ai-face-triple-the-layoff-risk-gallup-reveals</link>
<guid>tech-workers-ignoring-ai-face-triple-the-layoff-risk-gallup-reveals</guid>
<pubDate>Sat, 20 Jun 2026 12:15:33 GMT</pubDate>
<description><![CDATA[A new Gallup survey of over 23,000 US workers reveals a stark reality for tech employees: those who rarely use AI face an **18% predicted probability of being laid off**, compared to just **6%** for those who use AI at least monthly. This gap persists even after controlling for age, education, and sector, suggesting that AI adoption is becoming a key factor in job security.
## The Data Doesn't Lie
Gallup's February 2026 survey found that only 1% of laid-off workers directly blamed AI for their job loss. However, the data indicates that AI is not about mass replacement but **selection**. When companies face restructuring or budget pressures, workers who have integrated AI into their workflows appear less expendable.
## Real-World Layoff Numbers
Tech layoffs are already staggering: **78,557 tech workers** were laid off from January to early April 2026, with 37,638 cuts attributed to AI and automation, according to Tom's Hardware. Challenger, Gray & Christmas reported **52,050 US tech layoffs** in Q1 2026 alone. AI is now the language management uses to justify workforce reductions.
## What This Means for Founders
The key takeaway for startup leaders: don't just add "AI proficiency" to job descriptions. Instead, focus on **behavior**. Ask candidates to describe a real instance where AI changed how they approached a problem. A genuine user will detail the task, tool, mistakes, and results. A tourist will only talk abstractly about productivity.
## Training as a Retention Tool
Gallup's findings give startups a concrete retention argument: teaching employees to use AI well has **direct career value**. For companies that can't match Big Tech salaries, offering paid access to serious AI tools, time to learn, and managers who expect real use can be a competitive advantage.
## The Causality Question
While Gallup's data can't prove whether AI use causes job security or simply correlates with high performance, the practical implication is the same: treating AI adoption as optional is a bad bet. Either way, you need to build it or hire for it.
**The bottom line:** Tech workers who rarely use AI face an 18% layoff risk. That's the number to remember when someone says the company will get around to AI training later.]]></description>
<author>contact@remoteitjobs.app (RemoteITJobs.app)</author>
<category>ai</category>
<category>techlayoffs</category>
<category>gallupsurvey</category>
<category>jobsecurity</category>
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<title><![CDATA[AI Isn't Destroying Jobs as Fast as You Think: The Surprising Truth from Yale Research]]></title>
<link>https://www.remoteitjobs.app/article/ai-isnt-destroying-jobs-as-fast-as-you-think-the-surprising-truth-from-yale-research</link>
<guid>ai-isnt-destroying-jobs-as-fast-as-you-think-the-surprising-truth-from-yale-research</guid>
<pubDate>Fri, 19 Jun 2026 19:15:34 GMT</pubDate>
<description><![CDATA[It's easy for job seekers to feel stuck in an **AI doom loop**, with chatbots overhauling white-collar 9-to-5s and agents rewriting the rules for basic tasks. But new research from Yale Budget Lab reveals a surprising truth: **AI has had a modest impact on America's job market** since ChatGPT's release in 2022.
## AI is changing work, but not eliminating it
According to Yale's researchers, **AI usage has "no connection" to changes in employment or unemployment**. The pattern mirrors other major tech advances like the internet and computers. While AI has changed jobs more than eliminated them, the effect is slightly sharper in the months after launching but not the work revolution some Silicon Valley leaders have heralded.
Some sectors are hit harder than others—**finance and business are more vulnerable** than professions like nursing. However, occupational churn follows a similar trend line to other tech history moments, not causing a massive reset.
The report also found that high AI exposure doesn't starkly impact unemployment duration. The number of unemployed workers whose jobs were automated remains fairly static.
## The real job market challenges
It's not to say the job market is rosy. A lack of vacancies, widespread hiring freezes, and layoffs—some CEOs say are somewhat related to AI—have boxed people out of offices. Low quit rates mean few open positions. Jobs numbers are recovering this summer, but the dip may have more to do with **high interest rates** than tech disruption.
Giants like OpenAI and Anthropic are reevaluating pricing, meaning companies will pay more for regular AI use. Much current AI use isn't translating to major profits or productivity gains.
It's still early days for chatbots at the office. At least for now, **AI is unlikely to cause a sudden wave of unemployment**.]]></description>
<author>contact@remoteitjobs.app (RemoteITJobs.app)</author>
<category>ai</category>
<category>jobmarket</category>
<category>unemployment</category>
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<title><![CDATA[AI's Impact on Jobs: Why We Need Global Regulations Now]]></title>
<link>https://www.remoteitjobs.app/article/ais-impact-on-jobs-why-we-need-global-regulations-now</link>
<guid>ais-impact-on-jobs-why-we-need-global-regulations-now</guid>
<pubDate>Fri, 19 Jun 2026 12:15:44 GMT</pubDate>
<description><![CDATA[It seems that not a day passes without fevered headlines about the impact of **artificial intelligence (AI)** on future jobs. Alarm and confusion are everywhere – from young people trying to enter the job market to AI specialists worried their role is about to be usurped by AI itself, to accountants and lawyers watching AI gobble up roles that until recently justified high fees and salaries.
Panic is warranted, not just over the increasingly rapid encroachment of AI into every part of our personal and working lives but also over the truly confusing array of implications. **AI is going to create some jobs but destroy others.** It is going to change some jobs, sometimes routinising them and sometimes empowering them. It is going to create new demand but also eliminate demand.
As more consumers use AI to get things done rather than employing human specialists or intermediaries, AI could even make many roles invisible to gross domestic product as statisticians measure it.
Resistance to AI is sometimes countered by arguments that technological change has been a massive disrupter throughout history. Those arguments are fair: the arrival of motor transport ended our reliance on horses and the pivotal role of blacksmiths. Washing machines put thousands of laundry shops out of business, and computers brought an end to many printing-related jobs in the newspaper industry. The march of technology has also destroyed the role of telephone operators, bus conductors and lift operators.
Since my childhood, millions of once-essential jobs have disappeared, silently and unmourned. There was the milkman delivering to every home before dawn, the weekly visit of the coalman, the grocery van, the fizzy drinks lorry and even the ice cream van. As more families came to own cars, town-centre retailers and supermarkets persuaded us to come to them for our shopping rather than force them to come to us. The arrival of the internet and smartphones undermined the role of jobs from office typists and translators to travel agents and insurance salesmen.
History suggests that for every job lost to new technologies, others will be created. Productivity has risen, as have living standards. According to the **World Economic Forum’s 2025 Future of Jobs Report**, labour market transformation will result in the creation of an estimated **170 million jobs by 2030** but also the displacement of **92 million current jobs**.]]></description>
<author>contact@remoteitjobs.app (RemoteITJobs.app)</author>
<category>ai</category>
<category>jobdisplacement</category>
<category>futureofwork</category>
<category>regulation</category>
<category>technologyimpact</category>
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<title><![CDATA[Orlando's Hidden Tech Empire: $7B Simulation Hub You Never Knew Existed]]></title>
<link>https://www.remoteitjobs.app/article/orlandos-hidden-tech-empire-7b-simulation-hub-you-never-knew-existed</link>
<guid>orlandos-hidden-tech-empire-7b-simulation-hub-you-never-knew-existed</guid>
<pubDate>Thu, 18 Jun 2026 19:15:34 GMT</pubDate>
<description><
- [CPE ST3 welcomes new product manager for Next Generation Constructive](https://teamorlando.org/cpe-st3-welcomes-new-product-manager-for-next-generation-constructive/)
- [VJETTS tabletop exchange examines defense training interoperability challenges](https://teamorlando.org/vjetts-tabletop-exchange-examines-defense-training-interoperability-challenges/)
- [M-tron awarded $6.8M production contract for counter-drone radar programs](https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/m-tron-industries-inc-awarded-6-8-million-production-contract-for-major-counter-drone-radar-programs-302795336.html)
- [M-tron to host fireside chat at Planet MicroCap Las Vegas 2026 (June 17)](https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/m-tron-industries-inc-to-host-fireside-chat-at-planet-microcap-las-vegas-2026-conference-on-june-17-2026-302797034.html)
- [American Industrial Technologies and ideaForge sign LOI for drone, AI, and secure-mobility JV](https://www.morningstar.com/news/pr-newswire/20260608fl76711/american-industrial-technologies-and-ideaforge-sign-letter-of-intent-to-form-strategic-joint-venture-to-accelerate-next-generation-drone-ai-and-secure-mobility-solutions)
- [UCF, TAU Systems to collaborate on space radiation testing platform](https://www.ucf.edu/news/ucf-tau-systems-to-collaborate-on-space-radiation-testing-platform/)
- [As America celebrates 250 years of innovation, UCF is redefining technology](https://mynews13.com/fl/orlando/news/2026/06/13/as-america-celebrates-250-years-of-innovation--the-university-of-central-florida-is-redefining-technology-and-shaping-the-future-of-what-s-next)
- [UCF alum helps Siemens Energy power what comes next](https://www.ucf.edu/news/ucf-alum-helps-siemens-energy-power-what-comes-next/)
## Experience, Mobility, and Smart Places
Themed-entertainment design is the Orlando advantage outsiders most underestimate, because it looks like showmanship and runs like aerospace, full of ride-control systems, mechatronics, and the same XR and spatial-computing skills the defense labs covet. **Nassal**, which fabricates themed environments and show elements, consolidated into a roughly 116,000-square-foot Orlando campus outfitted with **5-axis CNC machines, large-format 3D printers, and robotic sculpting** — a small advanced-manufacturing plant that happens to make magic. The other half of the category supplies the comedy. The region that builds the world’s most convincing synthetic environments is, at the same time, still trying to understand its own intersections, with **MetroPlan** weighing whether to renew StreetLight Data, an analytics platform that maps regional traffic from phone, vehicle, and sensor data so planners can find the choke points. It can model a battlefield down to the last variable, yet the commute to Epic Universe still wins. Both efforts run on one instinct: a region treating physical space as a system to be measured and engineered, whether that space is a ride or a road. Practically, that overlap is a hedge for anyone with XR or mechatronics skills, since one résumé now sells to a theme park, a defense lab, or a city planning office.
- [OBJ: Nassal relocates Orlando facility as themed-entertainment industry booms](https://www.bizjournals.com/orlando/news/2026/06/10/theme-park-nassal-contractor-facility-new-move.html)
- [HERE: location intelligence update](https://www.linkedin.com/posts/here-ugcPost-7470492298867531776-CJ1y/)
- [MetroPlan Orlando considers extending AI-driven tool to spot traffic trouble spots in real time](https://www.clickorlando.com/news/local/2026/06/11/metroplan-orlando-considers-extending-ai-driven-tool-to-spot-traffic-trouble-spots-in-real-time/)
## Enterprise Platforms, Finance, and Cybersecurity
This section rewards anyone willing to read past the verbs in a press release. The clearest signal is **Climate First Bank’s first institutional round**, $67 million led by Wellington Management — real money from a serious name backing a profitable bank near $2 billion in assets that wants to acquire Central Florida community banks and eventually go public. **PlanSource** shipped Delivery Hub, which points human-in-the-loop AI at configuring benefits administration. **Abacus Global** made TIME’s inaugural World’s Growth Leaders list, screened on real revenue growth rather than vibes. A June 4 CISO panel pointed to a deepening bench of security leadership across payments, healthcare, and insurance. The capital is real across the board, and the only question worth asking of each line is whether the money is buying the future or tidying up the past. The takeaway for a founder raising here is that **national-grade money has arrived**, and it prices real growth over a good headline.
- [PlanSource unveils Delivery Hub, AI to automate and de-risk benefits administration](https://plansource.com/news/plansource-unveils-delivery-hub/)
- [Climate First Bank mulls IPO after raising $67 million](https://www.bizjournals.com/orlando/news/2026/06/09/climate-first-bank-fund-raise-ipo-wellington.html)
- [Abacus Global Management named to TIME’s World’s Growth Leaders of 2026](https://ir.abacusgm.com/news-events/press-releases/detail/185/abacus-global-management-named-to-times-worlds-growth-leaders-of-2026)
- [CISO Panel, Orlando CyberSecurity Event, June 4, 2026](https://www.youtube.com/watch?si=4NPIqo8D68Hk5u3K&v=w2qa14ZzZ6o&feature=youtu.be)
- [PureCycle announces proposed concurrent public offerings](https://www.globenewswire.com/news-release/2026/06/10/3310126/0/en/purecycle-announces-proposed-concurrent-public-offerings-of-convertible-senior-notes-and-common-stock.html)
## Cleantech, Industrial Innovation, and Civic Systems
The least glamorous category hides the most quietly astonishing science. **Altamonte Springs** is running a state-funded demonstration that uses **hydrothermal liquefaction**, with partner Genifuel, to cook biosolids from treated sewage into oil and gas while stripping out most of the forever chemicals in the same step. Read that twice, because a Central Florida suburb is turning municipal sludge into something close to fuel and dramatically cutting PFAS at the same time. **PureCycle** is at heart a chemistry company built on commercial-scale polypropylene purification, which turns hard-to-recycle plastic back into usable feedstock. Neither will ever trend online, and both are exactly the unphotogenic, physical-world problem-solving by which a serious innovation economy should actually be judged. For process and industrial engineers, the message is that **Orlando funds hard physical-world work**, not just software and shows.
- [Altamonte Springs turns sewage sludge into energy, usable water](https://www.cfpublic.org/environment/2026-06-08/altamonte-springs-turns-sewage-sludge-energy-usable-water)
- [PureCycle announces proposed concurrent public offerings (process-innovation context)](https://www.globenewswire.com/news-release/2026/06/10/3310126/0/en/purecycle-announces-proposed-concurrent-public-offerings-of-convertible-senior-notes-and-common-stock.html)
## Talent, Research, and Ecosystem Development
Every other section in this issue is quietly fighting over the people in this one. **UCF** supplies the academic backbone through its Institute for Simulation and Training, established in 1982 and, by the university’s account, the largest of its kind, plus a School of Modeling, Simulation and Training that ran one of the country’s first M&S graduate programs. **Full Sail**, in Winter Park, turns out the creative-technical half, with game design programs The Princeton Review ranked among the nation’s top 50 undergraduate and top 25 graduate for 2026, plus degrees in computer animation and simulation engineering. Then the demand side shows up and starts hiring everyone in sight. **Walt Disney World** is the largest single-site employer in the United States and Central Florida’s largest single taxpayer. **Universal Orlando’s Epic Universe**, which opened in 2025, has only deepened the resort’s demand for workers. Because a modern theme park runs on real-time 3D, robotics, and ride-control engineering, the people who can make a dragon breathe on cue are the same people the $7 billion defense-simulation cluster needs to model a battlefield. So the soft-sounding talent items carry real weight, whether it is a fresh cohort in StarterStudio’s Idea Stage Accelerator, a founder routing money back into UCF, or former 3M chief Sir George Buckley arguing that **Orlando should stop trying to out-giant the giants and invest in its own people**. Even the Fortune story on Gen Z moving here reads better as a recruiting question than a flattering one. The upshot cuts both ways: for employers, talent is the bottleneck worth out-investing rivals on, and for anyone who already has the skills, **the leverage has rarely been higher**.
- [Fortune: why Gen Z is flocking to Orlando](https://fortune.com/article/why-is-gen-z-moving-to-nashville-orlando-next-big-tech-towns/)
- [IDEA Stage accelerator cohort announcement](https://www.linkedin.com/posts/idea-stage-accelerator-cohort-ugcPost-7469821871677480960-C_Ry/)
- [Successful entrepreneur turns to UCF to amplify his impact](https://www.ucf.edu/news/successful-entrepreneur-turns-to-ucf-to-amplify-his-impact/)
- [Faces of Tech 2026: Full Sail University](https://www.orlandomagazine.com/faces-of-tech-2026-full-sail-university/)
- [Orlando Magazine: Sir George Buckley on driving innovation and growth in Central Florida](https://www.orlandomagazine.com/sir-george-buckley-on-driving-innovation-and-growth-in-central-florida/)
## Connecting the Dots
Pull back from the fortnight and one pattern explains the rest. Orlando keeps solving the same problem in different costumes. A defense contractor in Research Park, a fabricator shaping theme-park rockwork, and a UCF lab modeling space radiation are, underneath, hiring the same graduates and drawing on the same spatial-computing and XR toolkit. This cycle pushed that overlap further in every direction at once, as VirTra and Nassal poured concrete, M-tron and CPE ST3 carried defense simulation deeper into hardware and the cloud, UCF and TAU made space-grade testing cheaper, and Climate First and Abacus showed regional capital maturing. The region has effectively settled the old argument about whether it can build advanced systems, since its roughly $7 billion a year in simulation contracts answered that. The open question, the one every story here is quietly about, is whether the **talent pipeline can grow fast enough** to supply a defense base, two theme-park empires, a research university, and a maturing finance sector all reaching into the same classroom. That, far more than the next contract, is the figure worth watching for anyone trying to read where Orlando goes next.]]></description>
<author>contact@remoteitjobs.app (RemoteITJobs.app)</author>
<category>orlandotech</category>
<category>simulation</category>
<category>defense</category>
<category>xr</category>
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<title><![CDATA[Nvidia's Jensen Huang Bets AI Will Create Manufacturing Jobs, Not Kill Them]]></title>
<link>https://www.remoteitjobs.app/article/nvidias-jensen-huang-bets-ai-will-create-manufacturing-jobs-not-kill-them</link>
<guid>nvidias-jensen-huang-bets-ai-will-create-manufacturing-jobs-not-kill-them</guid>
<pubDate>Tue, 16 Jun 2026 19:15:46 GMT</pubDate>
<description><![CDATA[Jensen Huang, CEO of Nvidia, is making a bold bet that the AI revolution will revive U.S. manufacturing and create jobs, not replace workers. The test of this vision is a $2 billion factory in Sherman, Texas, an hour north of Dallas.
### The AI Factory
Nvidia is partnering with Coherent to produce Indium Phosphide, a material used in lasers that transmit data between computer chips. This technology allows chips to work as a single system, boosting power, speed, and efficiency while cutting power consumption by up to 50%. The factory will create an estimated 1,000 jobs, including 550 in advanced manufacturing, engineering, and technical roles.
### AI as a Job Creator
Huang argues that AI factories are the infrastructure of a new industrial revolution. Instead of supplanting workers, AI could be a source of job creation. The factory expansion is supported by bipartisan government funding: $33 million from the CHIPS and Science Act under the Biden administration and an additional $17 million grant from the Trump administration.
### Economic Impact
Economists Jessica and Jonathan Wachter estimate that the five largest U.S. tech firms invested $380 billion in AI infrastructure last year, a figure that could double in 2025. AI currently accounts for about 3% of U.S. GDP, but that could grow to 8-39%. Nvidia is shifting from making chips to providing entire AI systems, clustering production in the U.S. with chipmaking in Arizona and assembly in Texas.
### Political Context
President Trump, who has called Huang "smart" and "amazing," sees AI as essential to American greatness. His administration has placed export controls on AI models and signed an order for voluntary government vetting. Trump has also mused about the government owning a stake in AI companies.
### The Bottom Line
If successful, this factory could prove that AI boosts manufacturing jobs and reshapes the U.S. economy. As one Nvidia executive put it, AI can "move atoms" on factory floors, creating new products and savings.]]></description>
<author>contact@remoteitjobs.app (RemoteITJobs.app)</author>
<category>nvidia</category>
<category>ai</category>
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<title><![CDATA[Microsoft's Brad Smith on AI and Jobs: 'Let's Not Panic' — Here's Why]]></title>
<link>https://www.remoteitjobs.app/article/microsofts-brad-smith-on-ai-and-jobs-lets-not-panic-heres-why</link>
<guid>microsofts-brad-smith-on-ai-and-jobs-lets-not-panic-heres-why</guid>
<pubDate>Tue, 16 Jun 2026 12:15:32 GMT</pubDate>
<description><![CDATA[**Brad Smith**, vice chair and president of Microsoft, is pushing back against the doomsday predictions about AI and jobs. In a recent interview and new paper, he argues that tech leaders are alienating young Americans with hypocritical warnings and unrealistic hype.
## Why It Matters
Smith believes that dire predictions about AI's threat to entry-level white-collar jobs are souring young Americans on a transformative technology. He points to AI being booed at commencements as a "powerful wake-up call for the tech sector."
## Key Points from Smith's Interview
### 1. Hypocritical Warnings
Smith calls out tech leaders who advocate for a "global pause" on AI development while continuing to accelerate their own AI efforts. "If somebody says, 'This technology is so powerful that we need a global treaty to slow it down,' then I would say: Take your foot off the accelerator yourself if you think it's moving too fast."
### 2. Scaring Graduates
This year's graduates faced COVID during high school and socialized through screens amid political turmoil. "Now, they finally get to enter the workforce and here comes AI?" Smith says. "Too often, this is being presented to them as something that is going to happen to them, not for them."
### 3. Short-Term Distortion
Smith emphasizes that AI's impact will unfold over **25 years, not two-and-a-half**. Entrepreneurs may hype rapid change to raise money, but history shows that complete economic transformation takes time.
### 4. Unrealistic Hype
"Tech leaders tend to repeat two mistakes: They overestimate the impact of technology, especially the pace at which it will arrive, and they often underestimate people," Smith says. He draws a parallel to horses: "Let's use AI to help people do more, not replace us."
### 5. Fake Certainty
Smith criticizes those who made wrong predictions a decade ago but continue to make them with "extraordinary conviction." He calls this "great fodder for people who generate stories for a living."
### 6. Hollow Calls for Regulation
He warns of a repeat of the social media legislation debates, where companies called for regulation but opposed every specific bill. On AI policy, beware "ideas that are so grandiose that the chance of them being adopted is zero."
## The Bottom Line
Smith argues the AI debate has been "too focused on grandiose predictions" and not enough on using technology to help people do better things. His message: **Let's not panic** — AI will transform the economy over decades, not years, and we should focus on empowering people, not replacing them.]]></description>
<author>contact@remoteitjobs.app (RemoteITJobs.app)</author>
<category>ai</category>
<category>jobs</category>
<category>futureofwork</category>
<category>microsoft</category>
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<title><![CDATA[Make Your Resume Irresistible to AI: Expert Tips to Beat the Bot]]></title>
<link>https://www.remoteitjobs.app/article/make-your-resume-irresistible-to-ai-expert-tips-to-beat-the-bot</link>
<guid>make-your-resume-irresistible-to-ai-expert-tips-to-beat-the-bot</guid>
<pubDate>Mon, 15 Jun 2026 19:15:33 GMT</pubDate>
<description><![CDATA[Most companies now use AI as a first pass for job applicants. Here's how to make the algorithm love your CV without resorting to tricks.
## The Reality: AI is Your First Reviewer
With the job market "staid" and over **123,000 tech layoffs** in 2026 alone (AI being a top reason), competition is fierce. Nearly **90% of employers** use AI to rank or filter resumes, according to the World Economic Forum. AI acts as a first-round filter to narrow down hundreds of applicants, then humans step in for deeper evaluation.
## Does AI Level the Playing Field?
Career coach Jasmine Escalera, PhD, notes that AI removes some human bias (like alma mater preference), but it also makes the game harder because **everyone now knows to use keywords**. The key is to get past the bot and then **differentiate yourself** for the human reviewer.
## Beware of AI Tells
AI-generated resumes often have **too much jargon** and amplification. Escalera advises using AI as a **support tool**, not a crutch. Always edit to add a human touch and storytelling.
## Top Tips to Beat the Algorithm
- **Mirror the job description**: Use the exact terms from the posting. Even "customer success manager" vs. "client success manager" can matter.
- **Prioritize top bullets**: The first few requirements in a job description are often the most important.
- **Use AI to extract keywords**: Feed the job description into ChatGPT or Claude and ask for key terms to include.
- **Don't skip the cover letter**: This is your chance to tell a story and show why you're a unique fit—something AI can't fake.
## Final Thought
Remember, the goal is to get past the AI filter and then **stand out to a human**. Use AI wisely, but let your authentic experience shine through.]]></description>
<author>contact@remoteitjobs.app (RemoteITJobs.app)</author>
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