codeinabox@programming.dev to Programming@programming.devEnglish · 1 day agoWhat we lose when we stop codingnewsletter.humanwhocodes.comexternal-linkmessage-square9fedilinkarrow-up142
arrow-up142external-linkWhat we lose when we stop codingnewsletter.humanwhocodes.comcodeinabox@programming.dev to Programming@programming.devEnglish · 1 day agomessage-square9fedilink
minus-squareabc@suppo.filinkfedilinkarrow-up10·edit-21 day agoThere have been non-coding software architects for decades before LLMs became a thing. Most of us more experienced people are not in architect positions mainly because there are way fewer of those available. That’s changing now.
minus-squaremarcos@lemmy.worldlinkfedilinkarrow-up21·1 day agoNon-coding architects has been a well known organizational red-flag for decades. Non-coding people always lose track of reality, and it’s a disaster to give them decision power over fine-grained technical choices. Now, I don’t really know how that maps into non-coding software developers, but I’m not optimist.
minus-squarekibiz0r@midwest.sociallinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up13·23 hours agoIt’s a matter of feedback loops. It’s the same problem as when you divide teams by front-end/back-end, or implementation vs testing, or features vs platforming. When you don’t have to feel the pain of your decisions, you’re going to make bad decisions.
There have been non-coding software architects for decades before LLMs became a thing. Most of us more experienced people are not in architect positions mainly because there are way fewer of those available. That’s changing now.
Non-coding architects has been a well known organizational red-flag for decades.
Non-coding people always lose track of reality, and it’s a disaster to give them decision power over fine-grained technical choices.
Now, I don’t really know how that maps into non-coding software developers, but I’m not optimist.
It’s a matter of feedback loops.
It’s the same problem as when you divide teams by front-end/back-end, or implementation vs testing, or features vs platforming.
When you don’t have to feel the pain of your decisions, you’re going to make bad decisions.