| If I ignore the AGI parts, there's only: >Everything is awful for almost everyone. I expect even the ultra wealthy will find their lives significantly less pleasant than they were before. >We're three years into the ChatGPT revolution now and so far the main observable impact on the craft that I care about is that I can build more ambitious things. I think you refuse to extrapolate the obvious consequences and have forgotten (if you ever knew) how it's like to be in trenches. You put on the horse blinders of 'easy to build' on the left and 'so much fun' on the right and happily trot on, while the wolves of white collar job automation are closing in for the middle class. You believe that we'll all become cyborg centaurs, while the managers believe we'll all become redundant. You think people will care about the sideslop everyone will build, not seeing that 'everyone will build' means 'no one will care'. Worse, means no one will buy (knowledge| skill|creation). Indeed we have not tipped over into the abyss, but we're teetering and the wind is picking up. It's not the end times, it's not AGI, it doesn't have to be AGI to wreck great damage on the economy, our craft and, ultimately, our way of life and our minds. And the wind is picking up, faster and faster. |
I hope that we'll all become cyborg centaurs, and that people who think software engineers will all become redundant will be proved very wrong.
I'm trying to use what little influence I have to push things in that direction by ensuring software engineers have the knowledge and tools they need to become cyborg centaurs.
There is a very real chance that you're right, and that the way LLMs are going will massively disrupt the lives of software engineers in a very bad way.
I don't think that's a foregone conclusion yet, and I'm continuing to hope (and in my own tiny way push) for a better path.