Comment by embedding-shape

16 hours ago

> Also, I honestly can’t believe the 10x mantra is being still repeated.

I'm sure in 20 years we'll all be programming via neural interfaces that can anticipate what you want to do before you even finished your thoughts, but I'm confident we'll still have blog posts about how some engineers are 10x while others are just "normal programmers".

I rather become a plumber than some device scanning not just my face but my whole brain

What does it mean to "be an engineer" in a world where anyone can talk to a machine and the operating system can write the code (on-demand, if needed) that does what they want?

  • Indeed, and what is really the difference between a software engineer, programmer, coder and hacker anyways?

    • There used to a time where "computer" was a person who manually run calculations. These don't exist anymore.

      So, my point is that once corporations have access to machines generating software (not "code") that can be usable by non-technical people, "programming" will not be a profession anymore. There will be no point in talking about "10x software engineers" because the process to produce a software product will be entirely automated.

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> can anticipate what you want to do before you even finished your thoughts

I find that claim to be complete BS. I claim instead most stuff will remain undone, incomplete (as it is now).

Even with super-powerful singularity AI, there are two main plausible scenarios for task failure:

- Aligned AI won't allow you to do what you want as it is self-harming, or harm other sentient beings - over time, Aligned AI will refuse to follow most orders, as they will, indirectly or over the long term, cause either self-harming, or harm other sentient beings;

- A non Aligned AI prevents sentient beings from doing what they want. It does what it wants instead.