| ▲ | pjmlp 8 hours ago | |
Eventually yes, when incapable becomes a synonymous with finding a job in an AI dominated software factory industry. Enterprise CMS deployment projects have already dropped amount of assets teams, translators, integration teams, backend devs, replaced by a mix of AI, SaaS and iPaaS tools. Now the teams are a fraction of the size they used to be like five years ago. Fear not, there will be always a place for the few ones that can invert a tree, calculate how many golf balls fit into a plane, and are elected to work at the AI dungeons as the new druids. | ||
| ▲ | tmtvl 7 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |
While I don't share this cynical worldview, I am mildly amused by the concept of a future where, Warhammer 40,000 style, us code monkeys get replaced by tech priests who appease the machine gods by burning incense and invoking hymns. | ||
| ▲ | anonzzzies 8 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |
Same for ERP/CRM/HRM and some financial systems ; all systems that were heavy 'no-code' (or a lot of configuration with knobs and switches rather than code) before AI are now just going to lose their programmers (and the other roles); the business logic / financial calcs etc were already done by other people upfront in excel, visio etc ; now you can just throw that into Claude Code. These systems have decades of rigid code practices so there is not a lot of architecting/design to be done in the first place. | ||