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Why would they? The code that these AI's make currently is kind of garbage at least half of the time. It is a force-multiplier or can be used to rapidly prototype something or quickly build unit tests and things like that.

Those that are afraid of it are not figuring out how to use it to make their jobs easier.

Archive: https://archive.today/GygYM

From the post:

>This year, technologies such as JavaScript and PostgreSQL remain most popular, Rust and Markdown remain most admired, developers are most frustrated by technical debt at work, and they don’t see AI as a threat to their jobs.

Why would they? The code that these AI's make currently is kind of garbage at least half of the time. It is a force-multiplier or can be used to rapidly prototype something or quickly build unit tests and things like that. Those that are afraid of it are not figuring out how to use it to make their jobs easier. Archive: https://archive.today/GygYM From the post: >>This year, technologies such as JavaScript and PostgreSQL remain most popular, Rust and Markdown remain most admired, developers are most frustrated by technical debt at work, and they don’t see AI as a threat to their jobs.
[–] 1 pt

That's pretty short sighted. It gets twice as effective pretty much every year. If you're just coding to pay the bills for a couple years until you sell an app to one of the big tech companies and retire, then it makes sense not to worry about it. Otherwise it's time to look for a more hands on career.

[–] 1 pt

Until it gets to the point where I can just say "Make this program and make it saleable and make it so the infra is auto deployed" etc..etc.. there is always going to need to be a human somewhere in the mix.

It will reach that level of ability at some point and it probably will be a "all of a sudden" thing but from what I have seen with how things are going its still going to be a while.