Why I'm ignoring the "Death of the Programmer" hype
Posted by birdculture 6 hours ago
Comments
Comment by austin-cheney 5 hours ago
I do eventually see jobs eliminated though, why bother with React developers if AI can already write React/JSX better? It’s like any other form of industrialization. It’s the low skill/administrative jobs that are eliminated, like the many jobs eliminated by the photocopier in the 50s.
Comment by ThierryBuilds 5 hours ago
Comment by austin-cheney 4 hours ago
This is why some people are concerned and some have nothing to worry about. A machine can replace a street sweeper, because pushing a broom is a low skill task. The kinds of people that design or drive street sweeping machines are not the people replaced.
Comment by botacode 4 hours ago
To frame this in terms of falsifiable-ish predictions as the article requests (won't add numbers cause I don't have time to research).
- Dev productivity will improve with AI, but there will be fewer programming jobs because there will just be lower growth overall with the coming debt-overhang slowdown.
- The fraction of un/under-employed programmers as a percentage of total devs will continue to increase. We're at an all time high for number of devs worldwide and this will continue until the economy structurally re-adjusts.
- Employment in the sector will see even more "insider" vs "outsider" dynamics with a resurgence in the relative value of connections and seniority.
FWIW none of these are novel, just aggregated
Investors and markets have regularly rewarded layoffs and will continue to do so as growth stories become fewer and further between. AI (incredible though it is as a tool) is just the fig-leaf/cover for this transition to be framed as a growth and efficiency story that ennobles insiders even further. The implication will be that some devs are just more skilled at using these new tools/being insightful about business and therefore their continued employment is justified while the outsiders are just unskilled. While this will be true for a small percentage (as it is now!), it will be really mostly be access/restrictive guild dynamics at play driving the shift.