this post was submitted on 11 Feb 2025
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[–] Nursery2787@lemmy.ml 8 points 6 days ago

I haven’t seen anybody point this out yet. The owners of tech were never in it for the “tech”. It’s just a tool for them to wiggle their way up to the top. Trying to hit the jackpot so that they can wrest control of society from the current “old rich”.

[–] FangedWyvern42@lemmy.world 4 points 6 days ago

Article about bad AI decisions

Thumbnail is AI

Lmao

[–] Phoenicianpirate@lemm.ee 4 points 6 days ago (1 children)

I studied webdev and coding the hard way and I loved it. I felt unstoppable. But I still never got the job. But watching those people fail is still quite satisfying.

[–] echodot@feddit.uk 2 points 4 days ago

I ever so slightly miss all of the Internet Explorer 6 hacks. Sure it was utterly stupid they were required and we are in a much better position now, but it's less fun now. Everything just uses Chromium.

Fortunately Safari is still utter garbage so we've got that.

[–] JoeDyrt@lemmy.ca 144 points 1 week ago (10 children)

It’s hard for people who haven’t experienced the loss of experts to understand. Not a programmer but I worked in aerospace engineering for 35 years. The drive to transfer value to execs and other stakeholders by reducing the cost of those who literally make that value always ends costing more.

[–] reksas@sopuli.xyz 71 points 1 week ago (5 children)

those executives act like parasites. They bring no value and just leech the life from the companies.

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[–] SocialMediaRefugee@lemmy.world 30 points 1 week ago (2 children)

Executives think they are the most important part of the company. They are high level managers, that is all.

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[–] conditional_soup@lemm.ee 20 points 1 week ago

Well, yeah, but those costs are for tomorrow's executive to figure out, we need those profits NOW

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[–] cyrano@lemmy.dbzer0.com 78 points 1 week ago (18 children)

Imagine a company that fires its software engineers, replaces them with AI-generated code, and then sits back, expecting everything to just work. This is like firing your entire fire department because you installed more smoke detectors. It’s fine until the first real fire happens.

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[–] RideAgainstTheLizard@slrpnk.net 69 points 1 week ago (10 children)

The irony of using an AI generated image for this post...

AI imagery makes any article look cheaper in my view, I am more inclined to "judge the book by its cover".

Why would you slap something so lazy on top of a piece of writing you (assuming it isn't also written by AI) put time and effort into?

[–] pyre@lemmy.world 21 points 1 week ago (3 children)

this post is about programmers being replaced by ai. the writer seems ok with artists being replaced.

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[–] gravitas_deficiency@sh.itjust.works 63 points 1 week ago (1 children)

As a software engineer, I’m perfectly happy waiting around until they have to re-hire all of us at consulting rates because their tech stacks are falling the fuck apart <3

[–] themaninblack@lemmy.world 4 points 6 days ago

The jabronigrammers before me seem to have made a fine mess without the aid of an AI tool as it is…

[–] meyotch@slrpnk.net 59 points 1 week ago (1 children)

This is prophetic and yet as clear as day to anyone who has actually had to rely on their own code for anything.

I have lately focused all of my tech learning efforts and home lab experiments on cloud-less approaches. Sure the cloud is a good idea for scalable high traffic websites, but it sure also seems to enable police state surveillance and extreme vendor lock-in.

It’s really just a focus on fundamentals. But all those cool virtualization technologies that enable ‘cloud’ are super handy in a local system too. Rolling back container snapshots on specific services while leaving the general system unimpacted is useful anywhere.

But it is all on hardware I control. Apropos of the article, the pendulum will swing back toward more focus on local infrastructure. Cloud won’t go away, but more people are realizing that it also means someone else owns your data/your business.

[–] homesweethomeMrL@lemmy.world 20 points 1 week ago (2 children)

I think they were suckered in also by the supposed lower cost of running services, which, as it happens, isn't lower at all and in fact is more expensive. But you laid off the Datacenter staff so. Pay up, suckers.

Neat toolsets though.

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[–] schnurrito@discuss.tchncs.de 46 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Literally anybody who thought about the idea for more than ten seconds already realized this a long time ago; apparently this blog post needed to be written for the people who didn't do even that...

[–] MITM0@lemmy.world 31 points 1 week ago (3 children)

You underestimate the dumbassery of Pencil-Pushers in tech companies (& also how genuinely sub-human they can be)

[–] adminofoz@lemmy.cafe 3 points 6 days ago

To your point at my last company party i got drunk and kept complimenting people by calling them human.

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[–] JoMiran@lemmy.ml 33 points 1 week ago (5 children)

Although I agree, I think AI code generation is the follow up mistake. The original mistake was to offshore coding to fire qualified engineers.

Not all of offshore is terrible, that'd be a dumb generalization, but there are some terrible ones out there. A few of our clients that opted to offshore are being drowned is absolute trash code. Given that we always have to clean it up anyway, I can see the use-case for AI instead of that shop.

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[–] DrFistington@lemmy.world 28 points 1 week ago (9 children)

What most people forget is that as a programmer/designer/etc, your job is to take what your client/customer tells you they want, listen to them, then try to give them what they ACTUALLY NEED, which is something that I think needs to be highlighted. Most people making requests to programmers, don't really even know what they want, or why they want it. They had some meeting and people decided that, 'Yes we need the program to do X!' without realizing that what they are asking for won't actually get them the result they want.

AI will be great at giving people exactly what they ask for...but that doesn't mean its what they actually needed...

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[–] reksas@sopuli.xyz 27 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (12 children)

I'm just a dabbler at coding and even i can see getting rid of programmers and relying to ai for it will lead to disaster. Ai is useful, but only for smallest scraps of code because anything bigger will get too muddled. For me, it liked to come up with its own stupid ideas and then insist on getting stuck on those so i had to constantly reset the conversation. But i managed to have it make useful little function that i couldnt have thought up myself as it used some complex mathematical things.

Also relying on it is quick way to kind of get things done but without understanding at all how things work. Eventually this will lead to such horrible and unsecure code that no one can fix or maintain. Though maybe its good thing eventually since it will bring those shitty companies to ruin. any leadership in those companies should be noted down now though, so they cant pretend later to not have had anything to do with it.

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[–] cantstopthesignal@sh.itjust.works 26 points 1 week ago (1 children)

A reason I didn't see listed: they are just asking for competition. Yes by all means get rid of your most talented people who know how your business is run.

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[–] mohammed_alibi@lemmy.world 22 points 1 week ago (4 children)

I wonder if there will eventually be a real Butlerian Jihad

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[–] ignirtoq@fedia.io 20 points 1 week ago (2 children)

I'm sorry, I mostly agree with the sentiment of the article in a feel-good kind of way, but it's really written like how people claim bullies will get their comeuppance later in life, but then you actually look them up later and they have high paying jobs and wonderful families. There's no substance here, just a rant.

The author hints at analogous cases in the past of companies firing all of their engineers and then having to scramble to hire them back, but doesn't actually get into any specifics. Be specific! Talk through those details. Prove to me the historical cases are sufficiently similar to what we're starting to see now that justifies the claims of the rest of the article.

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