> I have not seen a single take by an experienced software engineer have a "sky is falling" take,
Let me save everybody some time:
1. They're not saying it because they don't want to think of themselves as obsolete.
2. You're not using AI right, programmers who do will take your job.
3. What model/version/prompt did you use? Works For Me.
But seriously: It does not matter _that_ much what experienced engineers think. If the end result looks good enough for laymen and there's no short term negative outcomes, the most idiotic things can build up steam for a long time. There is usually an inevitable correction, but it can take decades. I personally accept that, the world is a bit mad sometimes, but we deal with it.
My personal opinion is pretty chill: I don't know if what I can do will still be needed n years from now. It might be that I need to change my approach, learn something new, or whatever. But I don't spend all that much time worrying about what was, or what will be. I have problems to solve right now, and I solve them with the best options available to me right now.
People spending their days solving problems probably generally don't have much time to create science fiction.
The part before "But seriously" was sarcasm. I find it very odd to assume that a professional developer (even if it's not what they would describe as their field) is using it wrong. But it's a pretty standard reply to measured comments about LLMs.
> I find it very odd to assume that a professional developer (even if it's not what they would describe as their field) is using it wrong.
They're encountering a type of tool they haven't met before and haven't been trained to use. The default assumption is they are probably using it wrong. There isn't any reason to assume they're using it right - doing things wrong is the default state of humans.
Let me save everybody some time:
1. They're not saying it because they don't want to think of themselves as obsolete.
2. You're not using AI right, programmers who do will take your job.
3. What model/version/prompt did you use? Works For Me.
But seriously: It does not matter _that_ much what experienced engineers think. If the end result looks good enough for laymen and there's no short term negative outcomes, the most idiotic things can build up steam for a long time. There is usually an inevitable correction, but it can take decades. I personally accept that, the world is a bit mad sometimes, but we deal with it.
My personal opinion is pretty chill: I don't know if what I can do will still be needed n years from now. It might be that I need to change my approach, learn something new, or whatever. But I don't spend all that much time worrying about what was, or what will be. I have problems to solve right now, and I solve them with the best options available to me right now.
People spending their days solving problems probably generally don't have much time to create science fiction.