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Comment by rolph

7 days ago

in that one year, more was accomplished than writing a body of code.

people learned, explored concepts, and discovered lateral associations, developed collective actions, consolidated future solidarity.

claude just output some code.

i don't know if its just a bubble i'm in, but it seems like most of my day as an engineer is meetings/endless scrum events and tracking problems yet we sound more energy on automating code with llms than on automating all that other overhead...

i wonder, is coding really the bottleneck in most cases?

Exactly. It's a lot easier to prompt an LLM when you spent a year understanding the problem.

I routinely spend more time tweaking a prompt than Claude Code spends creating something. The better the prompt, the faster it seems to work (with better results). So I can totally relate to your comment.

It's awesome to be amazed by some cool new technology but let's not be naive.

Yes. Obviously no one is claiming that Claude Code literally made a year pass in an hour as if it were Superman spinning the Earth faster. Can we just keep the goalpost put for a second?

P.S. EDIT:

The big question will soon become - how technical do you need to be to build a system, because most of those learnings, concepts and associations are surely at the domain level. Or phrased differently: to what extent will future software development shift from hands-on engineering to hands-off technical guidance? Perhaps the future developer role would be much more similar to today's TPM (Technical Program Manager)?