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slopeloaf | 1 year ago
What an interesting finding and not what I was expecting. Is this an issue with the UX/tooling? Could we alleviate this with an interface that still incorporates the joy of problem solving.
I haven’t seen any research that Copilot and similar tools for programmers have a similar reduction in satisfaction. Likely with how much the tools feel like an extension of traditional auto complete, and you still spend a lot of time “programming”. You haven’t abandoned your core skill.
Related: I often find myself disabling copilot when I have a fun problem I want the satisfaction of solving myself.
dennisy|1 year ago
Half statement, half question… I have personally stopped using AI assistance in programming as I felt it was making my mind lazy, and I stopped learning.
aerhardt|1 year ago
rwyinuse|1 year ago
gmaster1440|1 year ago
- Reduced creativity and ideation work (dropping from 39% to 16% of time)
- Increased focus on evaluating AI suggestions (rising to 40% of time)
- Feelings of skill underutilization
sourcepluck|1 year ago
The way things seem to be going, I'd be worried management will find a way to monitor and try cut out this "security risk" in the coming months and years.