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What I am saying is these people are the decision makers. They chose where the money goes, what gets invested in, etc. The outcomes of their decisions might be measurable/determined as wrong years down the line - but I will be impacted immediately as someone in the industry.

It's the same shit as all the other VC funded money losing "disruptions" - they might go out of business eventually - but they destroyed a lot of value and impacted the whole industry negatively in the long run. Those companies that got destroyed don't just spring back and thing magically return to equilibrium.

Likewise developers will get screwed because of AI hype. People will leave the industry, salaries will drop because of allocations, students will avoid it. It only works out if AI actually delivers in the expected time frame.



The CEO who was in the news the other day saying "Replit ai went rogue and deleted our entire database" seems to basically be the CEO of a one-person company.

Needless to say, there are hundreds of thousands of such CEOs. You're a self-employed driver contracting for Uber Eats? You can call yourself CEO if you like, you sit at the top of your one-man company's hierarchy, after all. Even if the only decision you make is when to take your lunch break.


What are you talking about - there are quotes from all top tech CEOs bar maybe Apple (who are not on the bandwagon since they failed at executing with it), I listed some above. This is an industry wide trend and people justifying hiring decisions based on this, shelling 100m signing bonuses, etc., not some random YC startup guy tweeting.


Decision makers are wrong all the time. Have you ever worked at a startup? Startup founders get decisions wrong constantly. We can extrapolate and catastrophize anything. The reason CEOs are constantly jumping onto the bandwagon of new is because if a new legitimately disruptive technology comes around that you don't get behind, you're toast. A good example of that was the last tech boom which created companies like Meta and felled companies like Blackberry.

In my experience the "catastrophe hype", the feeling that the hype will disrupt and ruin the industry, is just as misplaced as the hype around the new. At the end of the day large corporations have a hard time changing due to huge layers of bureaucracies that arose to mitigate risk. Smaller companies and startups move quickly but are used to frequently changing direction to stay ahead of the market due to things often out of their control (like changing tariff rates.) If you write code just use the tools from time-to-time and incorporate them in your workflow as you see fit.


> A good example of that was the last tech boom which created companies like Meta and felled companies like Blackberry.

Meta (nee Facebook) were already really large before smartphones happened. And they got absolutely murdered in the press for having no mobile strategy (they tried to go all in on HTML5 far too early), so I'm not sure they're a great example here.

Also, I still miss having the Qwerty real keyboards on blackberry, they were great.




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