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threethirtytwotoday at 6:35 AM0 repliesview on HN

The truth is that it’s lowering the difficulty of work people used to consider hard. Which parts get easier depends on the role, but the change is already here.

A lot of people are lying to themselves. Programming is in the middle of a structural shift, and anyone whose job is to write software is exposed to it. If your self-worth is tied to being good at this, the instinct to minimize what’s happening is understandable. It’s still denial.

The systems improve month to month. That’s observable. Most of the skepticism I see comes from shallow exposure, old models, or secondhand opinions. If your mental model is based on where things were a year ago, you’re arguing with a version that no longer exists.

This isn’t a hype wave. I’m a software engineer. I care about rigor, about taste, about the things engineers like to believe distinguish serious work. I don’t gain from this shift. If anything, it erodes the value of skills I spent years building. That doesn’t change the outcome.

The evidence isn’t online chatter. It’s sitting down and doing the work. Entire applications can be produced this way now. The role changes whether people are ready to admit it or not. Debating the reality of it at this point mostly signals distance from the practice itself.