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throwingrocks | 8 months ago

> There is a popular argument that a software developer’s job is not write software but to solve a user’s problem. Bullshit

Wait, what?

> I was never particularly interested in the code itself

> Instead, I was always more interested in the product

Confusing contradictions aside, I had trouble engaging with this article.

The author seems to think every developer thinks like they do. Some people actually enjoy helping their business/users.

The author also has trouble imagining other perspectives as a people manager. From the linked article,

> I do not get any sort of high from managing people. I don’t think anyone gets that same high from this role

Hate to break it to the author again, but some people actually enjoy seeing those they mentor/manage succeed.

Being a people manager isn’t the right fit for everyone. Perhaps being a developer in the next 20, 5, or 1 year won’t be the right fit for the same people it is for today.

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raincole|8 months ago

While I agree with most of what the author says, this article does exude "Suno CEO says people don't enjoy making music" energy.

skydhash|8 months ago

It's like when image generators came out and people looks surprised that some people actually enjoy spending hours with a pencil to draw something and have not immediately come in mass to push the "generate" button.

izacus|8 months ago

Well, AI absolutely appeals to the type of bulkshitter which hates coding and wants to get away from it.

throwingrocks|8 months ago

> bulkshitter

With all due respect, this perspective baffles me. Some see it your way, others see so much opportunity.

me_darianb|8 months ago

This was my reaction exactly. I personally get my endorphins as a manager from seeing products get traction. The author clearly thinks differently from me and it seems like they don't believe devs like me exist.

dumbledoren|8 months ago

> Some people actually enjoy helping their business/users.

Beyond that - doing coding without solving problems or enabling anyone/anything is just doing art for art's sake. It may have a place, but its more personal, a hobby, an expression than anything tangible to be used in the real world - leaving aside business.

throwaway7783|8 months ago

> Confusing contradictions aside...

Product is not the same as code. We code to build a product, sure, but I think the author means they are interested in designing the product to solve users problems (a.k.a UX)