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by jongjong
357 days ago
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I've been waiting for architecture skills to 'explode in value' for my entire 15+ years career. Basically the reverse happened thus far; architecture has been neglected and even the number of roles like 'Software Architect' and 'Solution Architect' have been on the decline. I hope AI will force this shift to occur.
Once the juniors stop thinking that they know everything, stop seeing themselves as coders and start seeing themselves as 'vibe coders'; they may be more inclined to rely on senior devs to evaluate 'their' code and to fill in the gaps. Part of the issue before was that juniors who could churn out code at a rapid rate, didn't want to take advice from dinosaurs. I understand this very well because I was on the other side of the fence as a highly sought-after junior dev back in the day. I myself didn't see the value of senior devs back then. Part of the issue is that it takes a long time/effort even to be a junior dev and so by the time junior devs can write any apps at all and they've read a couple of 'Software design patterns' books (sigh...), they think they're geniuses and don't need to take advice from anyone. |
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I see the same. My conclusion is a lot of people who'd be doing these marketing, analysts and many other low paying jobs where one needs to appear slick have now joined computer/IT due to hig pay in considerable numbers and to the point they hold positions of technical director etc.
At least in my experience I find this push for micro services, async, reactive, cloud, kubernetes, kafka which are part of "we are going state of the art" narrative is just to appear slick.