Thanks for the referral. Interesting post—even if much of the technical-speak is lost on me. What I gathered is that nobody really knows if/when software engineering will become an unskilled job (no surprise) but, a) many are confident that it won’t be anytime soon (at least, for the discipline as a whole), and b) junior developers are the ones that LLMs are likely to replace (est. 1-3 yrs.).
While much of the thread’s early sentiments echo replies here, there’s a divergence concerning newer engineers as the conversation continues. It’s these bearish predictions that worry me. I don’t need to make six figures, but I can’t invest time (6-12 mo.) and money (courses, bootcamp, etc.) in a career path where newbie “escape velocity” is unlikely. More to think about...
Thanks for the referral. Interesting post—even if much of the technical-speak is lost on me. What I gathered is that nobody really knows if/when software engineering will become an unskilled job (no surprise) but, a) many are confident that it won’t be anytime soon (at least, for the discipline as a whole), and b) junior developers are the ones that LLMs are likely to replace (est. 1-3 yrs.).
While much of the thread’s early sentiments echo replies here, there’s a divergence concerning newer engineers as the conversation continues. It’s these bearish predictions that worry me. I don’t need to make six figures, but I can’t invest time (6-12 mo.) and money (courses, bootcamp, etc.) in a career path where newbie “escape velocity” is unlikely. More to think about...