I'm 60 years old. Claude Code killed a passion https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47386813

I'm with you 100%. AI has sucked the fun out of coding and IT work. There’s no satisfaction in solving problems anymore. I'm also just a few years away from 60, so I think we are on the same page. Maybe it is fatigue, I dunno.. you tell me.

I'm 60 years old. Claude Code killed a passion | Hacker News

@nixCraft So a tool that you don't HAVE to use sucks the fun out of your hobby? 🤔

That's ridiculous.

AI is a tool. A tool is a device that allows you to expend fewer calories performing a task.

You don't have to use it.

My grandmother used to knit because she enjoyed knitting, not because she needed to knit. She could have used tools, but the fun was in her hands doing it.

@juglugs @nixCraft coding is often social. it’s like trying to collaborate on a knitting project where you have a handcrafted artisanal vision and everyone you’re trying to collaborate with is intent on feeding your work into a knitting machine that twists it up and dyes it random colors (and giving you work that’s the output of the same machine)
@juglugs @nixCraft put another way, i’ve been coding in both hobbyist and professional contexts almost my whole life. professional programmers are being pushed out of work by these tools and their increasing corporate adoption. if the only way to not use these tools is in hobbyist contexts and small projects, we're headed to an extremely bad place. what these tools produce is not a replacement for human programmers and crucially, as people have been saying the entire time, has no development path that actually ends with it being able to produce human-quality code without human oversight, because the tools are fundamentally unintelligent

perhaps a more appropriate analogy for how software is embedded in our world is bridge-building. say we have a fully-automated bridge-builder bot that requires zero human oversight or labor, but fundamentally the bridges are gonna randomly collapse at a much higher rate than the human-built bridges. that's fine, because now we can make it up in scale! and the people who really liked building bridges can still do it as a hobby! i think i would probably start planning my routes to avoid bridges more often, especially if i was once a professional bridge-builder