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LatencyKills | 4 days ago
I’ve been an engineer for almost 40 years and love seeing what Claude Code can do.
Like it or not, young people will not know a world where this technology doesn’t exist. It is just part of their toolset now.
LatencyKills | 4 days ago
I’ve been an engineer for almost 40 years and love seeing what Claude Code can do.
Like it or not, young people will not know a world where this technology doesn’t exist. It is just part of their toolset now.
paganel|4 days ago
You would say that because otherwise you'd be afraid as being seen as "too old for this job", and hence risking getting kicked out of it all, meaning no future employment opportunities. I know that feeling, because I myself have been doing this programming job for 20+ years already (so not a young one by any means), but let's just cut the crap about it all and let's tell it how it is.
hu3|4 days ago
People of varied ages, already leverage LLMs on a daily basis. And LLMs will only get better.
Yesterday, Opus did work for me that would have taken me weeks. And the result was verified with a comprehensive suite of unit tests plus smoke tests by myself. The code looks exactly as the rest of the code in the 10y+ old, hand-written, enterprise project, no slop.
And you actually should be afraid of being left behind in dev related fields if you don't use LLMs. In most areas in fact.
Once the market corrects for LLM assisted production, the expectations will raise. So right now there is a small window to leverage LLMs as a time saving advantage before it becomes the norm and everyone is forced to use it because expecttions will reflect that.
LatencyKills|4 days ago
Um... I am still an active reverse engineer of both ring-0 and ring0 applications on both macOS and Windows (I worked on both the VS and Xcode teams). I'm developing a new tool for macOS that allows users to "see behind" active windows without the constant need for cmd/alt+tabbing. My age has zero bearing on my skill set or ability to understand technology. https://imgur.com/a/seymour-r9whXO5
> let's just cut the crap about it all and let's tell it how it is
The reality is, as I said, that this technology exists and it isn't going anywhere. Young people are going to use it as a tool just like we did when GUI operating systems first became prevalent.
I don't even remotely buy into the AI hype but I'm not going put the blinders on either. There is utility in this technology.
dakolli|4 days ago
I can't stand you old heads, I'm very happy for you that you got to stash away 40 years of SWE salaries. Its just ladder kicking behavior to be honest. Typical boomer, you got your nut and don't care what happens after.
25% of new college grads in STEM are unemployed and a bunch of companies (controlled by people in your age group) have laid off 400k Americans over the last 16 months while equities and profits are at an all time highs.
The replies : ItS NoT Ai, ItS cUz FrEe MoNeY fRoM CoViD HaS DrIeD uP.
MaybiusStrip|4 days ago
LatencyKills|4 days ago
The world was once entirely analog; generations of analog engineers had to throw away their knowledge and start over during the digital transition. It wasn't always pretty but they did it.
If you can't embrace technological change you might have wasted $100k.
stalfie|4 days ago