AI writing code is a scary thought. Niccas been trying to warn us, but we aint listening
I'm in a Cloud computing undergrad course now and the way things look: Cloud specific positions will disappear as the tools become more sophisticated and the functions will likely roll into what the System's Administrator/Engineer do. Anyone in IT has to make peace with constantly learning a little something new and biannual job searches. Outside of MAYBE medicine, no other industry shifts as regularly as IT. Its the nature of the game and coding will always be there in some capacity.You shouldn't have to learn how to read because we have audio books.
Like I get it, but A.I won't replace people from learning and it won't lower any barriers of entry that people are thinking.
You're going to have to grind and skill-up either way.
A developer at my job sent me a screenshot of 3 prompts he keeps in a txt file. Whenever he wants to get something started, change the wording and run it through Copilot. His years of experience just means cleaning up the errors and adding notes. Its a fukking game changer. With experience, you don't have to go from A - Z. Input A, let the AI work it out, and double-check Z.the productivity gains I've seen with GPT4 and Gemini frighten me.
As long as I understand at a high level what needs to be done and can translate it into a prompt, I'm getting code that needs little to no modifications damn near every single time
Underrated postSpeaking and writing are the most valuable skills. Read.
I’ve been reading a few tech and job recruiting subreddits and a lot of people are saying these tech and engineering jobs aren’t hiring anymore and are laying people off.
You just pull the plugWow thats fukking grimy but what happens when the a.i. malfunctions who fixes it then?!?