| ▲ | OneMorePerson 3 hours ago | |||||||
This is technically true in a lot of ways, but also intellectual and not identifying with what the comment was expressing. It's legitimately very frustrating to have something you enjoy democratized and feel like things are changing. It would be like if you put in all this time to get fit and skilled on mountain bikes and there was a whole community of people, quiet nature, yada yada, and then suddenly they just changed the rules and anyone with a dirt bike could go on the same trails. It's double damage for anyone who isn't close to retirement and built their career and invested time (i.e. opportunity cost) into something that might become a lot less valuable and then they are fearful for future economic issues. I enjoy using LLMs and have stopped writing code, but I also don't pretend that change isn't painful. | ||||||||
| ▲ | lovelearning 2 hours ago | parent [-] | |||||||
The change is indeed painful to many of us, including me. I, too, am a software engineer. LLMs and vibe coding create some insecurity in my mind as well. However, our personal emotions need not turn into disparaging others' use of the same skills for their satisfaction / welfare / security. Additionally, our personal emotions need not color the objective analysis of a social phenomenon. Those two principles are the rationales behind my reply. | ||||||||
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