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mfrommil | 2 years ago
But AI is nowhere close to perfect now, and will have flaws for a long time. Having AI write code is like having a so-so junior engineer, who can complete the task, but makes mistakes, so needs their code reviewed closely. And is unable to architect anything complex, that still needs to be done by the leads/managers/senior folks.
So more and more of the simple, low complexity coding tasks will be done by AI, while the value of importance of senior engineers will be as high as ever, since they need to oversee the AI's outputs.
What I wonder is how junior engineers, who will be starting their careers out as more expensive or weaker coders to AI, will get the experience necessary to become the senior engineers that need to guide/review the AI's work?
graphe|2 years ago
It'll be a test of try to pay less and probably a bunch of spaghetti code fixes after.
ActionHank|2 years ago
They build their product and then just seem to fizzle out. My guess that the technical debt and lack of talent retention kills them.