Tell HN: I am afraid AI will take my job at some point
23 points by funnyfoobar 4 days ago
I have been doing software for a living for the past 10 years or so.
I can call myself an average senior engineer. Cannot really pass the DSA rounds at Tier 1/Tier 2.
Somehow was able to keep the jobs I had so far via pure bruteforce and hard work.
These days I am pair programming with AI to write a lot of code. Probably checking in about 10 to 15k lines of code per month on average. I know it may not be a good metric, but if I compare myself to an earlier verision of me, that person would be checking in a 2 or 3 k lines of code at best per month.
I can get the work done, probably can do a bit of good judgement when AI writes sloppy code.
But, I am not sure till when these skills will be relevant
Like what if that judgement is not needed anymore, like 2-3 years down the line?
Is anyone else in the same boat? How are you dealing with this?
Writing from rural Japan.
You are witnessing the "Hyper-inflation of Syntax." If you measure your worth by LOC (Lines of Code), you are right to be afraid. AI has driven the cost of syntax to near zero.
But here is what I see in my work with old Japanese manufacturers (Shinise): When "Crafting" becomes cheap, "Responsibility" becomes the premium asset.
AI can write 15k lines of code, but it cannot take *Liability* for a single one. It cannot go to jail, it cannot lose its reputation, and it cannot feel the weight of a system failure.
Your job is shifting from "Writer" to "Guardian." Don't compete on volume (Scale). Compete on the ability to take the blame and guarantee the "Why." That is the one thing the algorithm can never optimize away.