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Nextgridyesterday at 7:56 PM5 repliesview on HN

LLMs are only a threat if you see your job as a code monkey. In that case you're likely already obsoleted by outsourced staff who can do your job much cheaper.

If you see your job as a "thinking about what code to write (or not)" monkey, then you're safe. I expect most seniors and above to be in this position, and LLMs are absolutely not replacing you here - they can augment you in certain situations.

The perks of a senior is also knowing when not to use an LLM and how they can fail; at this point I feel like I have a pretty good idea of what is safe to outsource to an LLM and what to keep for a human. Offloading the LLM-safe stuff frees up your time to focus on the LLM-unsafe stuff (or just chill and enjoy the free time).


Replies

zeroonetwothreeyesterday at 8:02 PM

I see my job as having many aspects. One of those aspects is coding. It is the aspect that gives me the most joy even if it's not the one I spend the most time on. And if you take that away then the remaining part of the job is just not very appealing anymore.

It used to be I didn't mind going through all the meetings, design discussions, debates with PMs, and such because I got to actually code something cool in the end. Now I get to... prompt the AI to code something cool. And that just doesn't feel very satisfying. It's the same reason I didn't want to be a "lead" or "manager", I want to actually be the one doing the thing.

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AstroBenyesterday at 8:20 PM

There are many tens (hundreds?) of billions of dollars being poured into the smartest minds in the world to push this thing forward

I'm not so confident that it'll only be code monkeys for too long

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notnullorvoidyesterday at 9:33 PM

Agreed. Programming languages are not ambiguous. Human language is very ambiguous, so if I'm writing something with a moderate level of complexity, it's going to take longer to describe what I want to the AI vs writing it myself. Reviewing what an AI writes also takes much longer than reviewing my own code.

AI is getting better at picking up some important context from other code or documentation in a project, but it's still miles away from what it needs to be, and the needed context isn't always present.

JeremyNTyesterday at 11:50 PM

I see what these can do and I'm already thinking, why would I ever hire a junior developer? I can fire up opencode and tell it to work multiple issues at once myself.

The bottleneck becomes how fast you can write the spec or figure out what the product should actually be, not how quickly you can implement it.

So the future of our profession looks grim indeed. There will be far fewer of us employed.

I also miss writing code. It was fun. Wrangling the robots is interesting in its own way, but it's not the same. Something has been lost.

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jauntywundrkindyesterday at 10:18 PM

Yes. And I'm excited as hell.

But I also have no idea how people are going to think about what code to write when they don't write code. Maybe this is all fine, is ok, but it does make me quite nervous!

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