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unconed | 2 months ago

cough

The Strange Case of "Engineers" Who Use AI

I rely on AI coding tools. I don’t need to think about it to know they’re great. I have instincts which tell me convenience = dopamine = joy.

I tested ChatGPT in 2022, and asked it to write something. It (obviously) got some things wrong; I don’t remember what exactly, but it was definitely wrong. That was three years ago and I've forgotten that lesson. Why wouldn't I? I've been offloading all sorts of meaningful cognitive processes to AI tools since then.

I use Claude Code now. I finished a project last week that would’ve taken me a month. My senior coworker took one look at it and found 3 major flaws. QA gave it a try and discovered bugs, missing features, and one case of catastrophic data loss. I call that “nitpicking.” They say I don’t understand the engineering mindset or the sense of responsibility over what we build. (I told them it produces identical results and they said I'm just admitting I can't tell the difference between skill and scam).

“The code people write is always unfinished,” I always say. Unlike AI code, which is full of boilerplate, adjusted to satisfy the next whim even faster, and generated by the pound.

I never look at Stack Overflow anymore, it's dead. Instead I want the info to be remixed and scrubbed of all its salient details, and have an AI hallucinate the blanks. Thay way I can say that "I built this" without feeling like a fraud or a faker. The distinction is clear (well, at least in my head).

Will I ever be good enough to code by myself again? No. When a machine showed up that told me flattering lies while sounding like a silicon valley board room after a pile of cocaine, I jumped in without a parachute [rocket emoji].

I also personally started to look down on anyone who didn't do the same, for threatening my sense of competence.

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