Software Developers Say AI Is Rotting Their Brains
Posted by HatingGeoffry@reddit | programming | View on Reddit | 12 comments
Posted by HatingGeoffry@reddit | programming | View on Reddit | 12 comments
SignificantRemote169@reddit
Those who understand the real brain lol, upvote cuz I know you are goddamm safe
chucker23n@reddit
What does that even mean
mordack550@reddit
He doesn’t understand brain 🧠
sarahbau@reddit
Brain and brain! What is brain?!
Brennan_Schwartz@reddit
The brain may not be a muscle, but it still needs exercise. We should be wary of delegating our complex thoughts outside of our conscious, otherwise we're robbing ourselves of much needed mental stimulation.
yanitrix@reddit
account needed to read the article
chucker23n@reddit
https://archive.is/tHq80
AWildMonomAppears@reddit
Sure but does the title have to be so click bait? Would love to see some actual studies on this btw
ProbablyBsPlzIgnore@reddit
It makes sense to me. Skills I don't use fade away. I did go projects in the past but off the top of my head wouldn't remember how to do it now, same with iOS apps. I had good grades for French but am not able to speak or read it now. I know I could pick it up when I need to, but if you let AI do everything, it makes sense all your skills start to decay.
That said, this isn't something employers would consider their problem. It's like RSI or neck pain, you deal with it.
chucker23n@reddit
Well, until they realize
Adventurous-Hunter98@reddit
The only reliable thing is my workload forcing me to take easy ways so I use ai for some tasks needs to be completed within ridiculous delivery times, I might be losing some skills from there but it can be re-earned.
bigorangemachine@reddit
NGL I laugh because my boss thinks I'll multi-task while running an agent.
In reality I spend more time explaining the change we need and guiding it to do what I want.
I also had to do a day and a half code review (adding unit tests) which had all sorts of "WTFs a human would never do this" type stuff.