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119 points lsharkey602 | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.249s | source
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ttul ◴[] No.44423514[source]
I run a mature software company that is being driven for profit (we are out of the fantastic future phase and solidly in the “make money” phase). Even with all the pressure to cut costs and increase automation, the most valuable use of LLMs is to make the software developers work more effectively, producing the feature improvements that customers want so that we can ensure customers will renew and upgrade. And to the extent that we are cutting costs, we are using AI to help us write code that lets us use infrastructure more efficiently (because infrastructure is the bulk of our costs).

But this is a software company. I think out in the “real world,” there are some low hanging fruit wins where AI replaces extremely routine boilerplate jobs that never required a lot of human intelligence in the first place. But even then, I’d say that the general drift is that the humans who were doing those low-level jobs have a chance to step up into jobs requiring higher-level intelligence where humans have a chance to really shine. And companies are competing not by just getting rid of salaries, but by providing much better service by being able to afford to have more higher-tier people on the payroll. And by higher-tier, I don’t necessarily mean more expensive. It can be the same people that were doing the low-level jobs; they just now can spend their human-level intelligence doing more interesting and challenging work.

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486sx33 ◴[] No.44423568[source]
So basically compressing the pay scale even further …
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eru ◴[] No.44423597[source]
Well, many people complain about pay inequality. Compressing scales is the opposite of that, so should be welcomed?
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spookie ◴[] No.44423727[source]
the compression is happening only to those still hired, though
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1. venturd ◴[] No.44424099[source]
Yeah it’s just non-violent genocide. Culling batches that don’t make an arbitrary cutoff, under the assumption the randos that are in charge are correct, while being randos.

Companies are doing a shit job of SABRE metrics to luck into some team that takes them all the way.

To what we don’t know since the company only exists to satisfy social wank. Jobs are just distractions from the kind of political problems the reduction in jobs and pay is creating.

These things don’t exist for any known immutable physics, but as a human distraction from war. And here we are simulating the same outcome; oh well this group of layoffs did not survive their invasion of Normandy.

Losses by the commoner are to be expected in war! I mean business!

What a shock in a system bootstrapped by military industrial complex zeitgeist of the post world war era.