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Posted by thehappyfellow |2 hours ago |0 comments

djoldman 2 hours ago

My guess is that folks with "deep blue" or mourning the potential loss of their programming "craft" do not feel that AI is "taking their craft" and making it categorically impossible to program the way they did before.

They know they can eschew AI and code the way they did before, but they fear that there will be little or no money to be made doing it. They fear that they won't be able to continue to have a career that supports them doing the work they did before in the way they used to do it.

These folks may be upset because they portend that the market dynamics will force them to either use AI and make money or not use AI and make no money.

jvanderbot 2 hours ago

Quite a decent read, actually.

Boils down to the same "Typing is removed as a bottleneck but it was never the real job." And at least attempts to re-instill a lost sense of agency I see from developers here and there.

Essentially.. "The craft changes, you decide to maintain what you love or what the market rewards". So, maybe we all just loved coding so much that we happened to make money doing it? I'm not sure that's the essence of the anxiety floating around. I think it's more of an evaporating opportunity to use your experience to provide for yourself, that people are worried about.

fcarraldo 2 hours ago

> Speaking as a developer, this becomes obvious the moment you step outside the romantic framing. I have been doing this for years, and the hardest parts of the job were never about typing out code. I have always struggled most with understanding systems, debugging things that made no sense, designing architectures that wouldn't collapse under heavy load, and making decisions that would save months of pain later.

> None of these problems can be solved LLMs. They can suggest code, help with boilerplate, sometimes can act as a sounding board. But they don't understand the system, they don't carry context in their "minds", and they certainly don't know why a decision is right or wrong.

It is becoming increasingly true that they do exactly this. In some cases, better than (some? many?) humans.

Also, the anti-Marxist Objectivism rant has no place in this article, as well as making no sense. Yes, the woodworker could continue working with their hands. But in society, today, they require money in order to have food and shelter, and that money needs to come from somewhere. If the market devalues the process of doing work by hand, and comes to value the speed and consistency of doing work through machines and automation, then the artisan cannot choose to simply continue spending dozens of hours per week working wood unless they are independently wealthy or have some other source of income. Individualism is not paramount in a society in which you are forced to participate for basic needs.

contextfree 2 hours ago

kind of agree with the actual point about programming; the framing is some Ayn Rand claptrap

2 hours ago

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the_axiom 2 hours ago[1 more]

this is juvenile bullshit and probably AI generated

it's an important part of the craft that it is useful

if it became useless because of machines then it isn't the same thing anymore

2 hours ago

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