The defense industry lost the ability to make weapons when crisis hit. The same pattern is eroding software engineering skills. The timelines are identical.
And I’m not ignoring “rapid deskilling”. I’m specifically arguing against the very specific point that TFA article made that “we will forget how to code”. That’s clearly not what will happen.
Some people today still know assembler. Some people still how to design CPUs. Some still know lithography. Not as many as before, because we just don’t have the need.
I marvel at the number of engineers who don’t think about memory allocations at all. But it’s ok - they probably don’t need to, for the task they’re solving.
I’m not proposing anything. That’s a whole different conversation. I’m not proposing ways to fix climate change either. Doesn’t mean they aren’t bad.
Corporate-backed vibecode tools want coders to cease thinking about their own code, which is different from software engineers not being able to build hardware. Apples and oranges.
You propose we do what exactly with AI?
And I’m not ignoring “rapid deskilling”. I’m specifically arguing against the very specific point that TFA article made that “we will forget how to code”. That’s clearly not what will happen.
Some people today still know assembler. Some people still how to design CPUs. Some still know lithography. Not as many as before, because we just don’t have the need.
I marvel at the number of engineers who don’t think about memory allocations at all. But it’s ok - they probably don’t need to, for the task they’re solving.
I’m not proposing anything. That’s a whole different conversation. I’m not proposing ways to fix climate change either. Doesn’t mean they aren’t bad.
Corporate-backed vibecode tools want coders to cease thinking about their own code, which is different from software engineers not being able to build hardware. Apples and oranges.