> It's probably fine--unless you care about self-improvement or taking pride in your work.
I’m hired to solve business problems with technology, not to self-improve or get on my high horse because I hand-wrote a silly abstraction layer for the n-th time
As humans we have developed tools to ease our physical needs (we don’t need to run, walk or lift things) and now we have a tool that thinks and solve problems for us
Many have the attitude of finding one edge case that it doesn’t work well and dismiss AI as useful tool
I’m an early adopter and nowadays all I do is to co-write context documents so that my assistant can generate the code I need
AI gives you an approximated answer, it depends on you how to steer it to a good enough answer and this takes time and learning curve … and evolves really fast
Some people are just not good at constantly learning things
I was pre-diabetic at 100kg and went down to 70kg over a year of low carb diet and intermittent fasting
It’s a daily struggle trying to NOT eat until literally feeling pain in the belly, and even then, I know if I wait 30 minutes more I can keep eating