No you’re not. The “how” is your job to understand, and if you don’t you’ll end up like the devs in the article.
We as an industry have been able to offload a lot of “how” via deterministic systems built by humans with expert understanding. LLMs give you the illusion of this.
No in my case the “how” is
1. I spoke to sales to find out about the customer
2. I read every line of the contract (SOW)
3. I did the initial requirements gathering over a couple of days with the client - or maybe up to 3 weeks
3. I designed every single bit of AWS architecture and code
4. I did the design review with the client
5. I led the customer acceptance testing
> We as an industry have been able to offload a lot of “how” via deterministic systems built by humans with expert understanding. LLMs
I assure you the mid level developers or god forbid foreign contractors were not “experts” with 30 years of coding experience and at the time 8 years of pre LLM AWS experience. It’s been well over a decade - ironically before LLMs - that my responsibility was only for code I wrote with my own two hands
Yes, and trusting an LLM here is not a good idea. You know it will make important mistakes.
I’m not saying trusting cheap devs is a good idea either. I do think cheap devs are actually at risk here.