| ▲ | teucris 3 hours ago | ||||||||||||||||
Software developers should be worried about their jobs, not because these tools are capable of replacing them or reducing a company’s need for human developers, but rather because the _perception_ that they can/will replace developers is causing a major disruption in hiring practices. I truly don’t know how this is going to play out. Will the software industry just be a total mess until agents can actually replace developers? Or will companies come to their senses and learn that they still need to hire humans - just humans that know how to use agents to augment their work? | |||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | thefourthchime 3 hours ago | parent | next [-] | ||||||||||||||||
Software development hiring is terrible right now, but hiring has been pretty slow in general. We gained 2 million jobs in 2024 and only 500,000 in 2025. | |||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | AstroBen 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] | ||||||||||||||||
That can't possibly be a long term disruption. If it doesn't work it doesn't work If AI can't replace developers, companies can't replace developers with it. They can try — and then they'll be met with the reality. Good or bad | |||||||||||||||||
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| ▲ | rekabis 3 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | ||||||||||||||||
> the _perception_ that they can/will replace developers is causing a major disruption in hiring practices. Bingo. And it’s causing the careers of a majority of juniors to experience fatal delays. Juniors need to leap into their careers and build up a good head of steam by demonstrating acquired experience, or they will wander off into other industries and fail to acquire said experience. And when others who haven’t even gone through training yet see how juniors have an abysmally hard time finding a job, this will discourage them from even considering the industry before they ever begin to learn how to code. But when no-one is hiring such that even students reconsider their career choice, this “failure to launch” will cause a massive developer shortage in the next 5-15 years, to the point where I believe entire governments will have this as a policy pain point. After all, when companies are loathe to actually conduct any kind of on-the-job training, and demand 2-5 years of experience in an whole IT department’s worth of skills for “entry level” jobs, an entire generation of potential applicants with a fraction of that (or none at all) will cause the industry to have figurative kittens. I mean, it will be the industry’s own footgun that has hurt them so badly. I would posit it may even become a leggun. The schadenfreude will be copious and well-deserved. But it’s going to produce massive amounts of economic pain. | |||||||||||||||||
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