I don't think that genAI will replace developers. I do think it's possible that it will change what being a developer means, though. The real question, I think, is "if this change happens, is it something you could be OK with?"
My personal answer to that is "no", but I'm close enough to retirement that I don't have to consider changing careers to avoid it. I'll be gone if/when it becomes a real issue. However, if I were closer to the front end of my career, I'd certainly be looking to change, perhaps to technical writing.
> However, if I were closer to the front end of my career, I'd certainly be looking to change, perhaps to technical writing.
It's tough for Juniors. I recommend specializing on one or two systems aspects, like performance, reliability, security. Understanding is design, how to measure the aspect, how to reason about it, knowing which levers to pull.
AI is the poison pill for corporations. They cannot resist the idea that with no people to pay they will make even more profit. If you think about that, and understand that AI is about search, then you see that there will be enormous opportunity to build software that is built to help people not make profit.
Even if you don't really like programming, the takeover by Artificiality will mean that the value of Actuality will increase dramatically. So go for actual value in what you do.
AI doesn’t replace developers, it just allows developers to write more code. Now more code per developer, but there is still a lot of software that isn’t written due to a skilled developer shortage, so you’ll probably be fine if you are competent. It does limit growth, and a lot of younger kids are going to have to pick new fields to pursue, but many were just in programming for the money, so maybe they can follow their passion instead?
Answer to the qn: I’d start option trading full time :)
But I don’t really think jobs will eventually dry up, because with the advent of ai, the competent developer’s productivity increases exponentially, and teams can stay lean and build unicorn businesses, case for startups
But for corporates at the end of the day, their hiring won’t change ig, most of the layoffs are not directly related to ai at all, is what I feel. They will keep on hiring people for the sake of hiring tbh
JohnFen|1 month ago
My personal answer to that is "no", but I'm close enough to retirement that I don't have to consider changing careers to avoid it. I'll be gone if/when it becomes a real issue. However, if I were closer to the front end of my career, I'd certainly be looking to change, perhaps to technical writing.
pipo234|1 month ago
It's tough for Juniors. I recommend specializing on one or two systems aspects, like performance, reliability, security. Understanding is design, how to measure the aspect, how to reason about it, knowing which levers to pull.
talkingtab|1 month ago
Even if you don't really like programming, the takeover by Artificiality will mean that the value of Actuality will increase dramatically. So go for actual value in what you do.
seanmcdirmid|1 month ago
DGAP|1 month ago
pipo234|1 month ago
vrn21|1 month ago
But I don’t really think jobs will eventually dry up, because with the advent of ai, the competent developer’s productivity increases exponentially, and teams can stay lean and build unicorn businesses, case for startups
But for corporates at the end of the day, their hiring won’t change ig, most of the layoffs are not directly related to ai at all, is what I feel. They will keep on hiring people for the sake of hiring tbh