RE: https://toot.cat/@plexus/116283016837715719

It should also be noted that beyond the ethical, political and environmental issues with this is that it doesn't work:

1. There is on average no mid to long term productivity gain with actual real-world software development that isn't just a "wow see what it can do" demo. (Multiple studies have shown that now.)

2. It won't help with 90% of the work when professionally making software, which, believe it or not, isn't coding. 90% of the work is designing and planning the software (these are things that happen both upfront and during development).

Maybe you have seen the recent Microsoft thing rolling back features in Windows they added?

E.g. Copilot in Notepad. What they did is essentially outsourcing project management to developers who then outsourced it to LLMs. But an LLMs can't plan and design software, and arguably barely can even generate code that works (as in reliable and performant). So now they have a buggy mess with features no one wants and they're rolling it back.

There's no silver bullets in software development.

It does have real-world effects though, such as your company paying money to deskill its own employees.

They could do this much cheaper, for example by lacing the coffee with lead.

@thomasfuchs

That requires RTO, but maybe that's a secret reason for RTO