Same here. I don't understand how people leave it running on an "autopilot" for long periods of time. I still use it interactively as an assistant, going back and forth and stepping in when it makes mistakes or questionable architectural decisions. Maybe that workflow makes more sense if you're not a developer and don't have a good way to judge code quality in the first place.

There's probably a parallel with the CMSes and frameworks of the 2000s (e.g. WordPress or Ruby on Rails). They massively improved productivity, but as a junior developer you could get pretty stuck if something broke or you needed to implement an unconventional feature. I guess it must feel a bit similar for non-developers using tools like Claude Code today.

>Same here. I don't understand how people leave it running on an "autopilot" for long periods of time.

Things have changed. The models have reached a level of coherence that they can be left to make the right decisions autonomously. Opus 4.6 is in a class of its own now.

A non-technical client of mine has built an entire app with a very large feature set with Opus. I declined to work on it to clean it up, I was afraid it would have been impossible and too much risk. I think we are at a level where it can build and auto-correct its mistakes, but the code is still slop and kind of dangerous to put in production. If you care about the most basic security.