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msvana 19 hours ago

I work as an ML engineer/researcher. When I implement a change in an experiment it usually takes at least an hour to get the results. I can use this time to implement a different experiment. Doesn't matter if I do it by hand or if I let an agent do it for me, I have enough time. Code isn't the bottleneck.

I also heard an opinion that since writing code is cheap, people implement things that have no economic value without really thinking it through.

apsurd 19 hours ago | parent [-]

+1 on the economic value line. Not everything needs to be about money but if you get paid to ship code it's about money. And now we have coworkers shipping insane amounts of "features" because it's all free to ship and being an engineer, it ends there.

Only it doesn't, there's product positioning, UX, information architecture, onboarding and training, support, QA, change management, analytics, reporting… sigh

embedding-shape 16 hours ago | parent [-]

> but if you get paid to ship code it's about money.

Tip to budding software engineers: try to not work in these sort of places, as they're about "looking busy" rather than engineering software, where the latter is where real long-lasting things are built, and the former is where startup founders spend most their money.

The last paragraph is where the tricky and valuable parts are, and also where AI isn't super helpful today, and where you as a human can actually help out a lot if you're just 10% better than the rest of the "engineers" who only want to ship as fast as possible.