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Nobody knows how to build with AI yet

(worksonmymachine.substack.com)
526 points Stwerner | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.207s | source
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wiremine ◴[] No.44618060[source]
I've been experimenting with model-based development lately, and this resonated strongly with me.

The section "What Even Is Programming Anymore?" hit on a lot of the thoughts and feels I've been going through. I'm using all my 25+ years of experience and CS training, but it's _not_ programming per se.

I feel like we're entering an era where we're piloting a set of tools, not hand crafting code. I think a lot of people (who love crafting) will be leaving the industry in the next 5 years, for better or worse. We'll still need to craft things by hand, but we're opening some doors to new methodologies.

And, right now, those methodologies are being discovered, and most of us are pretty bad at them. But that doesn't mean they're not going to be part of the industry.

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gronglo ◴[] No.44621688[source]
> I think a lot of people (who love crafting) will be leaving the industry in the next 5 years, for better or worse.

I think you're spot on. It was once necessary to acquire knowledge in order to acquire productivity. This made knowledge valuable and worth attaining. Now, with LLMs, we we can skip the middle man and go straight to the acquisition of productivity. I'd call it the democratisation of knowledge, but it's something more than that — knowledge just isn't needed anymore.

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1. wiremine ◴[] No.44629152[source]
> knowledge just isn't needed anymore

I would argue we still need the knowledge: the principles aren't changing, and they are needed to be truly productive in certain things. But the application of those principles _are_ changing.