←back to thread

399 points nomdep | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.293s | source
Show context
lexandstuff ◴[] No.44295309[source]
Great article. The other thing that you miss out on when you don't write the code yourself is that sense of your subconscious working for you. Writing code has a side benefit of developing a really strong mental model of a problem, that kinda gets embedded in your neurons and pays dividends down the track, when doing stuff like troubleshooting or deciding on how to integrate a new feature. You even find yourself solving problems in your sleep.

I haven't observed any software developers operating at even a slight multiplier from the pre-LLM days at the organisations I've worked at. I think people are getting addicted to not having to expend brain energy to solve problems, and they're mistaking that for productivity.

replies(3): >>44295716 #>>44300265 #>>44339626 #
1. AstroBen ◴[] No.44300265[source]
> not having to expend brain energy to solve problems, and they're mistaking that for productivity

Couldn't this result in being able to work longer for less energy, though? With really hard mentally challenging tasks I find I cap out at around 3-4 hours a day currently

Like imagine if you could walk at running speed. You're not going faster.. but you can do it for way longer so your output goes up if you want it to