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specprocyesterday at 6:19 PM2 repliesview on HN

You're making the right call there. I've felt it, seen it around me personally. That study is terrifying.

I'm no code ninja at the best of times. It's scary to hear that's happening to top engineers.

I need an exit strategy. Anyone else come off AI?


Replies

rf15yesterday at 6:24 PM

Yes, feeling like I had to relearn to walk. The first week was rough, everything was wired for LLM usage and autocomplete. Couldn't even type right anymore.

dgellowyesterday at 7:07 PM

Yeah, I had the same and decided to cancel all my subscriptions and remove all my local models ~1 months ago ago.

So far I’m very happy with my decision.

I wrote about it here: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48083162

> I had the same experience over the past year with early coding harness at the beginning of the year, then Claude code since its release date. But after 1+year going that direction I really don’t want to continue. The novelty is gone, dealing with AI now feels frustrating and boring, I miss engaging deeply with the actual lower level technical challenges. I do not want to manage fleets of agents. I do not want to rediscover for the hundredth time that in fact all this time an agent took shortcuts for acceptance tests I rely upon and didn’t catch. Or once again get the agent to understand why and what I want it to do after its context got bloated and it start to drift completely. While I got artifacts I can use (libraries, tools, docs), including some things that I’m pretty confident are SoA I do not feel satisfied anymore knowing that I used a model to generate them, even if I was the one designing every part of it. I do feel that I’m lying anytime I come to a colleague to share a new cool tool I have made.

> YMMV but I’m personally feeling burnt out with AI coding agents and ready to go back to the old ways for my next personal project

And also here (specifically to human communication): https://sam.elborai.me/articles/no-more-llm-comms/.