I can't seem to get the article to load, but I think I get the gist from the title.
I hired a junior "dev" who literally hadn't even completed an HTML course. Before AI I could not have hired them because they literally did not know how to dev. After AI, anyone with a little grit can push themselves into the field pretty easily.
As with everything in life: you can choose to hard route or you can choose the easy route and your results will follow accordingly.
> As with everything in life: you can choose to hard route or you can choose the easy route and your results will follow accordingly.
Hard agree, but probably not in the way you're implying.
It's the difficult things that make life fun and interesting. A life spent going from one easy thing to another is a life barely lived at all.
> I hired a junior "dev" who literally hadn't even completed an HTML course.
I mean, I'm a fairly senior dev, and have literally never completed, or indeed really heard of, a html course. Is that, eh, part of your average CS degree these days?
>> who literally hadn't even completed an HTML course.
so what is their value? proxy your requests to ai?
Why are you paying them instead of running the AI yourself?
Adam, can you please share, how in the world, this junior dev got hired with you?
I'm self-taught dev with multiple years of experience. I choose the hard route, even after AI. For me, programming is theory building, so I always choose understanding above all else.
Rock solid understanding of TypeScript, frontend and backed.
I have sent 100s of CVs. For Juniors, Mids and Seniors. Not even a single interview.
I will be glad for your thoughts on the matter.