| > what if the most important professional “developer skill” to learn or improve is how to effectively use coding agents? Well, it's not. There's a small moat around that right now because the UX is still being ironed out, but in a short while able to use coding agents will be the new able to use Excel. What will remain are the things that already differentiate a good developer from a bad one: - Able to review the output of coding agents - Able to guide the architecture of an application - Able to guide the architecture of a system - Able to minimize vulnerabilities - Able to ensure test quality - Able to interpret business needs - Able to communicate with stakeholders |