lol. my personal preference has always to do ALL the coding as early as possible. i get progressively dumber as the day wears on, seems sad to waste the prime hours on meetings and other more human things.
I don't see how that would change if you accept the premise that code is now a commodity.
That is essentially what the article says, that mornings are the most productive time, but it has shifted the focus from you doing the work, and mostly in the morning, to you outlining the work clearly in the morning, and the agent doing the work all day (and all night, and while you commute, and while you are in meetings)
Not linear in my case. My best is somewhere around 11ish. So that's usually when I start my ballmer peak and take my first beer. (Joking, of course, for people who don't get the reference)
This kind of generalizations are very organization specific because they rely on preexisting rules set within company. I dismiss every such rule and work that forces me to adjust my daily routine too heavily. Let me choose my best ways to deliver more instead of trying to fit me in the box.
In these cases, I just read the main point behind in this case is "create a way for devs to share context when working with AI".
My_Name|14 days ago
hbogert|14 days ago
ilvez|14 days ago
In these cases, I just read the main point behind in this case is "create a way for devs to share context when working with AI".