> we need to create a culture that values craftmanship and dignifies work done by developers.
Developers waste a lot of time writing a bunch of boilerplate code that they hate writing and that doesn’t make them happy and has nothing to do with craftmanship. We also just spent 60 years in a culture that dignified work done by developers to the extreme, and honestly that produced some of the most narcissistic minds the world has ever seen: Thiel, Andressen, et al - and why? Because we dignify work in a capitalistic culture by increasing wages.
You want to talk about a culture that values craftmanship? Let everyone have the time and the freedom and the security to build whatever they want to build, instead of what they have to build in order to have health insurance.
> We need to talk seriously and plainly about the spiritual and existential damage done by LLMs.
Uhhhhhh…..excuse me?
> despite hundreds of billions of dollars, it hasn't fully delivered on its promises, and investors are starting to be a bit skeptical.
More money was invested in the dot-com boom, and in the lead up to the railroad era, before anyone could ride. So this isn’t new.
I think this boilerplate thing got lost in translation some time ago.
We dislike _the presence_ of boilerplate, not the time spent writing it. If another thing writes it for you, it implies that _now boilerplate exists_, and it sucks.
It makes me unhappy when it exists. It makes me unhappy if it appears in seconds.
That said, there is some potential for using AI to reduce boilerplate and help create more meaningful software. However, that is definitely not the way things are shaping out to be.
Developers waste a lot of time writing a bunch of boilerplate code that they hate writing and that doesn’t make them happy and has nothing to do with craftmanship. We also just spent 60 years in a culture that dignified work done by developers to the extreme, and honestly that produced some of the most narcissistic minds the world has ever seen: Thiel, Andressen, et al - and why? Because we dignify work in a capitalistic culture by increasing wages.
You want to talk about a culture that values craftmanship? Let everyone have the time and the freedom and the security to build whatever they want to build, instead of what they have to build in order to have health insurance.
> We need to talk seriously and plainly about the spiritual and existential damage done by LLMs.
Uhhhhhh…..excuse me?
> despite hundreds of billions of dollars, it hasn't fully delivered on its promises, and investors are starting to be a bit skeptical.
More money was invested in the dot-com boom, and in the lead up to the railroad era, before anyone could ride. So this isn’t new.