|
|
|
|
|
by draebek
460 days ago
|
|
I have to say that I am worried that, by taking myself out of the loop for the 99%, I'm going to get worse at the 1% of things that occasionally fall into my lap because the LLM can't seem to do them. I think software engineering is a skill that is "use it or lose it", like many others. There's also the question of whether I will enjoy my craft if it is reduced to, say, mostly being a business analyst and requirements gatherer. Though the people paying me probably don't care very much about that question. |
|
The takes are as different as (paraphrasing): "if a person can't create something with en empty text editor, I fail them", and "if a person can't speed run through an unrealistically large set of goals because they don't use AI-assisted development, I fail them".
I guess one should keep their skills at both honed at all times, even if neither are particularly useful at most real jobs, because you never know when you're going to be laid off and interviewing.