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Posts tagged with Tech industry

Average CEO Says AI Ready To Replace Developers

Average CEO Says AI Ready To Replace Developers
Someone asked ChatGPT to count days of the week containing the letter "d" and it confidently listed Monday, Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday. Spoiler alert: it missed Tuesday, Saturday, and Sunday. That's 3 out of 7, or roughly a 57% failure rate on a task a kindergartener could nail. Yet somehow CEOs are out here thinking this is the tech that'll replace entire engineering teams. Nothing screams "I understand AI capabilities" quite like watching an LLM fail basic pattern matching while your exec team plans layoffs. The irony? The AI couldn't even count the letter "d" correctly in a seven-item list, but sure, let it architect your microservices. What could possibly go wrong? 🙃

Job Market Is Sucked

Job Market Is Sucked
The tech job market has gone from "you need to know everything ever invented" to "do you know what a computer is?" Real quick. Back in the day, you had to master Go, Rust, C++, Python, .NET, and probably sacrifice a goat to the algorithm gods just to be considered for a junior role. Now? Companies are so desperate they're hiring people who can barely close an HTML tag. The bar has dropped so low it's practically underground. The stressed-out polyglot developer with their entire tech stack visible behind them gets rejected, while someone who literally just types <html></html> gets the offer. The recruiter even puts on a fancy hat for the occasion, like they're hiring a distinguished gentleman instead of someone who just discovered what an opening tag is. The pendulum swings hard in tech hiring. One year they want you to have 10 years of experience in a framework that's been out for 3 years, the next year they're begging anyone with a pulse and a keyboard to join. Welcome to the chaos.

Fixed It.

Fixed It.
You spend months architecting the perfect solution with every port, protocol, and interface imaginable. Then Microsoft Copilot shows up like "hey bestie, let's chat about your feelings instead of actually solving anything." The gap between what developers want (actual tools that work) and what we get (another chatbot that'll suggest `npm install` for a hardware problem) has never been wider. At least the motherboard I/O panel won't gaslight you into thinking your USB-C port is "just a learning opportunity."

Tech Companies Cutting Devs For AI

Tech Companies Cutting Devs For AI
Corporate logic at its finest: fire half your engineering team, replace them with AI, then wonder why your production system is now generating haikus instead of handling transactions. The "I'm lighter now, I can run faster" mentality perfectly captures how tech executives think they're optimizing for efficiency when they're really just sawing off their own legs to reduce weight. Sure, you're technically lighter and might even move faster initially, but good luck running a marathon when you're missing critical infrastructure. Spoiler alert: the remaining devs will be spending their time debugging AI hallucinations and explaining to management why ChatGPT can't actually deploy to production. But hey, at least the quarterly earnings call will sound impressive before everything catches fire.

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Have You Met Anyone

Have You Met Anyone
Yeah, turns out AI was supposed to automate the boring stuff and free us up for creative work. Instead, everyone's just using it to write more emails, generate more content, and attend more meetings about AI adoption strategies. The workload didn't shrink—it just got redistributed into "prompt engineering" and fixing hallucinated code that looked convincing at 2 AM. The real productivity gain? Now you can produce mediocre work at 10x the speed, which means your boss expects 10x the output. Congratulations, you played yourself.

SaaS In 2026

SaaS In 2026
The dystopian future of SaaS is here, and it's absolutely unhinged. No QA because the AI hallucinations are now considered "features" – who needs testing when you can just gaslight users into thinking bugs are intentional design choices? Customer support has been replaced by chatbots so expensive to run that you're literally not worth the API costs. And my personal favorite: you paid $10 for an app, so naturally you should tip the developers for... doing their job? It's like Uber but for software you already bought. The cherry on top is that 95% SLA that promises only 1 hour of downtime per day. That's 18.24 days of downtime per year, but hey, the devs need their lunch break! Traditional SLAs aim for 99.9% or higher, but in 2026 we're apparently speed-running the race to the bottom. The startup playbook has evolved from "move fast and break things" to "move fast and monetize your users' suffering."

How Dare You Try New Things

How Dare You Try New Things
The eternal curse of tech: someone proposes creating a new standard to "solve" the existing mess, and instead of having 14 competing standards, you now have 15. The boardroom stays calm when you say the current chaos is "perfectly fine," but the moment you suggest creating yet another universal solution, everyone loses their minds. The real kicker? The time spent reinventing the wheel could've been used to just learn one of the existing wheels. But no, YOUR wheel will be different. YOUR wheel will be the one that finally unites everyone. Spoiler: it won't. Classic reference to the famous XKCD comic about standards proliferation. Because nothing says "I'm a problem solver" quite like adding to the problem you're trying to solve.

Five Years Of Loyalty Lol

Five Years Of Loyalty Lol
Nothing says "thanks for your dedication" quite like getting replaced by a shiny new tool that's been around for 6 months. Your senior dev who knows the entire codebase inside out, survived three major refactors, and can debug production issues blindfolded? Yeah, the founder's more interested in that hot new AI that hallucinates code and confidently suggests importing libraries that don't exist. The real kicker? That loyal coder probably spent the last year training the AI on the company's codebase. Galaxy brain move right there. It's like spending five years building someone's dream, only to watch them run off with a chatbot that can't even pass a basic code review without suggesting you install npm packages from 2015. Pro tip: Job hopping every 2 years isn't disloyalty—it's pattern recognition.

Keep Preaching AI Bros

Keep Preaching AI Bros
The AI evangelists out here writing manifestos about how you'll be "left behind" if you don't worship at the altar of AGI, meanwhile the rest of us are just trying to ship features and not get paged at 2 AM. One side's got apocalyptic visions of AI rapture, the other's got... Tuesday. Both involve suffering, but at least one comes with a paycheck. The corporate "spot the difference" energy is perfect here because they're both trying to scare you into compliance. AI bros want you terrified of obsolescence, companies want you terrified of unemployment. Different font, same existential dread. Welcome to tech in 2024, where everyone's selling fear and calling it innovation.

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Blasted Well Maybe Next Year

Blasted Well Maybe Next Year
You know those quarterly meetings where management asks what you've accomplished? Yeah, "legit useful/profitable non-scam vibe coded apps" didn't make it to the boardroom this year either. Instead, we've got another blockchain-powered AI NFT marketplace that solves problems nobody has. The sign gets yeeted out the window faster than a deprecated npm package. The real tragedy is that somewhere in your git stash, there's probably a genuinely useful tool you built at 2 AM that actually saves people time. But nope, annual meeting gets the crypto-enabled todo list app with "synergy." See you next fiscal year, functional software.

Job Hunt 2026

Job Hunt 2026
The job market has gone absolutely feral with AI requirements. You've got companies demanding "AI platform" experience, "AI powered" solutions, "AI first" architecture, and the mysterious "AI agentic flow" (because apparently just saying "AI agents" wasn't buzzword-y enough). Meanwhile, you're sitting at the bar like Homer, just trying to land a job with your regular old programming skills. By 2026, every job posting will require 5+ years of experience with AI frameworks that were released 6 months ago. Entry-level positions will demand you've built your own LLM from scratch and trained it on your tears. The kicker? They'll probably use an AI recruiter to reject your application in 0.3 seconds because you didn't use the exact keyword "agentic" in your resume.

Got Me Thinking

Got Me Thinking
So here's the uncomfortable truth bomb: having a CS degree is neither necessary nor sufficient for being a good developer. About half of the talented devs out there learned by actually building stuff instead of memorizing Big O notation for exams they'll never use. Meanwhile, every terrible developer somehow has that fancy degree because—plot twist—they passed tests but never learned to, you know, actually code. The follow-up reply is even spicier: the only reason we know these awful engineers exist is because they managed to interview well enough to land jobs. Turns out a degree is great at opening doors, just not at making you competent once you're inside. It's like having a driver's license but still parking like you're playing GTA. The real skill? Learning to code despite your education, not because of it.