I have definitely noticed the same occurring in North American cinema, but I do not think this is a new phenomenon. Rather, it's just a symptom of the increased commercialization of indie cinema - commercialization requiring film for all to understand.
If one is to broaden their horizons, overseas cinema is still devoid of this literalism. European cinema, Korean cinema, and the famously show not tell Japanese cinema still produce ambiguous stories that compete for awards - just look at recent pictures in Anatomy of a Fall, Zone of Interest, Drive my Car, Decision to Leave.
Can't say I see an issue here. As long as drivers are driving at a responsible speed (which any amount of traffic will guarantee ;) ), it does the job it needs to and adheres to the large amount of bureaucratic friction forced upon the engineering team. Hope the engineers receive better treatment in their future endeavors.
Agree with you on that. There is nothing about LLMs that makes them uniquely suited for bug finding. However, they could excel re:bugs by recovering traces as you say, and taking it one step further, even recommending fixes.
There is value, yes. However, things are rarely so black and white as the commenter above you sees it wherein one could simply disconnect entirely. The reality of it is within our current zeitgeist the digital world is unavoidable - be it in the workplace, the condensation of our activities (incl. unavoidable ones- banking, etc) into apps on our phones.
Of course this is barring the idea of withdrawing all ones savings and moving onto a farm and living off the land :D.
Seems like this is more for the hobbyists - building webpages for the love of the act. Frameworks are built to be standardized, enforce best practices via their design, and allow developers to 'hit the ground running', so to speak.
No web site is intrinsically valuable - the information and functionality it wraps is what holds its value. Developing the access to that information and function, enforcing correctness, and the timeliness of that development is what frameworks empower orgs to deliver at much lower cost in the present and future, vs. vanilla web dev.
If one is to broaden their horizons, overseas cinema is still devoid of this literalism. European cinema, Korean cinema, and the famously show not tell Japanese cinema still produce ambiguous stories that compete for awards - just look at recent pictures in Anatomy of a Fall, Zone of Interest, Drive my Car, Decision to Leave.