A very high-priced consultant hired to clean up the mess made by managers who asked AI to build an enterprise system but didn't think it through or specify it correctly.
If that would actually happen (not change our jobs but replace all developers) I think a lot of other jobs would also be replaced. So don't see a point in trying to plan for that very unpredictable future. Better to pivot at that point instead to what seems to be the best option at that time.
I personally don’t believe it, but as the title says: what if? I realized yesterday I’m not sure I truly have a viable plan whether it happens in 5, 10, or even more years.
That'd mean the military also switched to AI to write software. I'd become a doomsayer and prepper. I'd mean sell ebooks and online courses on prepping of course.
My hope is that I would still be valuable from a UX and high level architectural point of view: knowing what to ask the AI to write and connect together to create the application. Suddenly my writing the spec for the software that the AI will write becomes my job, and maybe I can then produce a lot of softwares whereas pre-AI I’d only be able to work on one at a time, since I have to also write the actual software.
I've asked myself a similar question in the form of "if I was born 100+ years ago, what would I do instead?" I feel like I would get into carpentry more. Though I have really been enjoying pottery lately, so maybe I would do both and see what works out.
While it wasn't called AI 22 years ago I've been hearing my whole career that some new tech would make programmers obsolete. As far as I can tell we're still 25 years away from being 25 years away.
I wasn’t trying to argue the truth of any of the recent timeline claims regarding AI. The question could be taken as any disruption that removes the viability of your career in a short period of time. What’s your backup in that case?
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[ 5.0 ms ] story [ 32.5 ms ] threadSo I guess I may have to start selling drugs or robbing banks.