▲ | imiric 5 days ago | |
> I want people to care about quality, I want them to care about consistency, I want them to care about the long-term effects of their work. Yeah, that's not happening. LLMs enable masses of non-technical people to create and publish software. They enable scammers and grifters who previously would've used a web site builder to also publish native and mobile apps, all in a fraction of the time and effort previously required. They enable experienced software developers to cut corners and automate parts of the job they never enjoyed to begin with. It's remarkable to me that many people who have been working in this industry for years don't enjoy the process of creating software, and find many tasks to be a "chore". A small part of this group can't identify quality even if they cared about it. The rest simply doesn't care, and never will. Their priorities are to produce something that works on the surface with the least amount of effort, or, in the case of scammers, to produce whatever can bring them the most revenue as quickly and cheaply as possible. LLMs are a perfect fit for both use cases. Software developers who care about quality are now even a smaller minority than before. They can also find LLMs to be useful, but not the magical productivity booster that everyone else is so excited about. If anything their work has become more difficult, since they now need to review the mountains of code thrown at them. Producing thousands of lines of code is easy. Ensuring it's high quality is much more difficult. |