It's like saying "AI is going to replace book writers because they are so much more productive now". All you will get is more mediocre content that someone will have to fix later - the same with code.
10% more productive. What does that mean? If you mean lines of code, then it's an incredibly poor metric. They write more code, faster. Then what? What are the long-term consequences? Is it ultimately a wash, or even a detriment?
LLMs set a new minimum level; because of this they can fill in the gaps in a skillet — if I really suck at writing unit tests, they can bring me up from "none" to "it's a start". Likewise all the other specialities within software.
Personally I am having a lot of fun, as an iOS developer, creating web games. No market in that, not really, but it's fun and I wouldn't have time to update my CSS and JS knowledge that was last up-to-date in 1998.
10% more productive. What does that mean? If you mean lines of code, then it's an incredibly poor metric. They write more code, faster. Then what? What are the long-term consequences? Is it ultimately a wash, or even a detriment?
https://stackoverflow.blog/2024/03/22/is-ai-making-your-code...