This thread was somehow instantly flagged, but behind the sarcasm in the article I note three things:
1. It is the most refreshing article I've read through the HN homepage lately. Not a single em-dash, no "not X. Just Y", none of the other more subtle AI tells. I felt like reading the thoughts of an actual person, not reading an expanded version of a person's core idea.
2. After writing 11 books, I'd been thinking I was basically done with writing, this blog post made me change my mind.
3. I found this part interesting:
> It turns out coding just isn’t much of a bottleneck. What takes most of my time is everything else: figuring out the requirements, resolving ambiguity, waiting for feedback, testing and validating, coordinating with other teams, going to meetings, project planning, and so on. It’s the people stuff that’s slow, not the computer stuff.
It seems like all the talk recently has been about automating all of this "other stuff" now that the coding/writing/image generation/etc part is "handled" by models. What'd be left then?
Amazing. I feel like you could write entire books about this new way. Think of the fame and fortune that awaits such visionaries! Surely this is the way of the future. The next "Andrej Karpathy", "Boris Cherny", "Peter Steinberger" are just waiting to be discovered.
1. It is the most refreshing article I've read through the HN homepage lately. Not a single em-dash, no "not X. Just Y", none of the other more subtle AI tells. I felt like reading the thoughts of an actual person, not reading an expanded version of a person's core idea.
2. After writing 11 books, I'd been thinking I was basically done with writing, this blog post made me change my mind.
3. I found this part interesting:
> It turns out coding just isn’t much of a bottleneck. What takes most of my time is everything else: figuring out the requirements, resolving ambiguity, waiting for feedback, testing and validating, coordinating with other teams, going to meetings, project planning, and so on. It’s the people stuff that’s slow, not the computer stuff.
It seems like all the talk recently has been about automating all of this "other stuff" now that the coding/writing/image generation/etc part is "handled" by models. What'd be left then?
I'm going to ask Claude to write me a skill I can follow. Maybe I should start experimenting with a tweet or an email, as a proof of concept.