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by fkyoureadthedoc
335 days ago
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$200 does not get you a decent programmer though. It needs constant prompting, babysitting, feedback, iteration. It's just a tool. It massively boosts productivity in many cases, yes. But it doesn't do your job for you. And I'm very bullish on LLM assisted coding when compared to most of HN. High level languages also massively boosted productivity, but we didn't see salaries collapse from that. > And they are not likely to remain competent if they are all doing 80% review, 15% prompting and 5% coding. I've been doing 80% review and design for years, it's called not being a mid or junior level developer. > OTOH, the pipeline for juniors now seems to be irrevocably broken I constantly get junior developers handed to me from "strategic partners", they are just disguised as senior developers. I'm telling you brother, the LLMs aren't helping these guys do the job. I've let go 3 of them in July alone. |
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I find this surprising. I figured the opposite: that the quality of body shop type places would improve and the productivity increases would decrease as you went "up" the skill ladder.
I've worked on/inherited a few projects from the Big Name body shops and, frankly, I'd take some "vibe coded" LLM mess any day of the week. I really figured there was nowhere to go but "up" for those kinds of projects.