Because I reject the premise that "heavy use" automatically makes a developer lazy, and I reject the premise that code is the most important output of a developer, I actually think you're agreeing with me, you just don't realize it. If a developer sees AI as the kind of tool that allows them to lean into laziness, then you're right: they'll be average.
BUT, if you agree that code isn't the real value of a developer and you concede that AI can be used purely as a tool, then I think you must agree with my statement that it will make you _more_ of what are already are. It will exaggerate what is already there. That's exactly my point.
I would love it if it could run against archived messages (`in:anywhere -in:trash -in:spam`) ... I've been archiving all email for a very long time and being able to run stats and purge it would do wonders.
The use of Trivy is really just an interesting context for post. I use it for Terraform for guidance. I know it’s used by some teams at Splunk.
I couldn’t possibly answer a question about what every one of the 86,000 Cisco employees does.
Re: em dashes— I type with double-hyphens a lot. I guess my blog software (Jekyll) doesn’t convert them into real em dashes, but I didn’t notice until you mentioned it.
BUT, if you agree that code isn't the real value of a developer and you concede that AI can be used purely as a tool, then I think you must agree with my statement that it will make you _more_ of what are already are. It will exaggerate what is already there. That's exactly my point.