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  3. Reposting a question for Ed Zitron, I'll forward responses.

Reposting a question for Ed Zitron, I'll forward responses.

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  • Ondřej SurýO Ondřej Surý

    @icing @ludicity Yes, also this! ^^^

    My open-source peers are usually technically very sounds. There were some exceptions in the past, but I could count these on one hand.

    Perhaps, if you do something out of the pure joy, it is hard to stay incompetent?

    daniel:// stenberg://B This user is from outside of this forum
    daniel:// stenberg://B This user is from outside of this forum
    daniel:// stenberg://
    wrote last edited by
    #27

    @ondrej @icing @ludicity lots of peeps these days do OSS as part of their job, not for fun. They found a bug or fixed something on behalf of their employer. Enterprise style. This allows the same set of incompetence, but perhaps at a lower frequency.

    Stefan EissingI 1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • Ludic 🧛L Ludic 🧛

      Reposting a question for Ed Zitron, I'll forward responses. He asked on Bluesky and will get sub-Mastodon-tier answers:

      "This is a serious question and I would be delighted if I only hear great things but, software engineers: both before and after LLMs, how often in your professional lives have you run into software engineers that seem completely useless or lacking in basic knowledge? I hope the answer is rarely"

      🎇 David Zaslavsky 🎇D This user is from outside of this forum
      🎇 David Zaslavsky 🎇D This user is from outside of this forum
      🎇 David Zaslavsky 🎇
      wrote last edited by
      #28

      @ludicity I don't think it's happened in my professional life. At each company I've worked at there are some programmers who seem to be a bit behind the curve, and occasionally a few who don't do very good work, but nobody I would consider completely useless.

      1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • buheratorB buherator
        @ludicity I worked mostly at (pen)testing and have always been astonished how basics of basics were unclear for many people (e.g. "does this code run on the client or the server?"). My opinion in summary is that the general quality of sw engineering/ers declined since managers figured out they can bill by the hour instead of fulfillment under the guise of "agile" (see "I'm gonna write myself a new minivan this afternoon").
        Sass, DavidS This user is from outside of this forum
        Sass, DavidS This user is from outside of this forum
        Sass, David
        wrote last edited by
        #29

        @buherator @ludicity I have run into security engineers a couple of times matching that description.

        buheratorB 1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • Ludic 🧛L Ludic 🧛

          Reposting a question for Ed Zitron, I'll forward responses. He asked on Bluesky and will get sub-Mastodon-tier answers:

          "This is a serious question and I would be delighted if I only hear great things but, software engineers: both before and after LLMs, how often in your professional lives have you run into software engineers that seem completely useless or lacking in basic knowledge? I hope the answer is rarely"

          P This user is from outside of this forum
          P This user is from outside of this forum
          pinskia
          wrote last edited by
          #30

          @ludicity I would say for GCC, the difference is NOT pre-LLM vs post-LLM when it comes to software engineers that seems completely useless or lacking in basic knowledge.

          In fact I would say the difference for GCC bug reports it would be when it became more common knowledge that there is undefined behavior in C/C++.

          Since there is so much more things written about how signed integer overflow is undefined behavior and much more written about C/C++ aliasing rules; there have been much push back at their code having undefined behavior in it.

          GCC seemly gets less and less bug reports that need to be closed as invalid for having undefined behavior in it. In the last 2 months, GCC has got around 3 or 4 that has had undefined behavior in it. Around 10 years ago, it would have been closer to 12 or so for a 2 month span.

          These days my bug triaging is more about bug reports that have been already filed rather than invalid ones.
          (been doing this for 20+ years now too so I have noticed trends like this).

          1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • Ludic 🧛L Ludic 🧛

            Reposting a question for Ed Zitron, I'll forward responses. He asked on Bluesky and will get sub-Mastodon-tier answers:

            "This is a serious question and I would be delighted if I only hear great things but, software engineers: both before and after LLMs, how often in your professional lives have you run into software engineers that seem completely useless or lacking in basic knowledge? I hope the answer is rarely"

            ndevenishN This user is from outside of this forum
            ndevenishN This user is from outside of this forum
            ndevenish
            wrote last edited by
            #31

            @ludicity oh boy. Pre, regulary, absolutely. LLM do not seem to have made that much of an inroads yet into our field, except Juniors getting led astray and eventually coming back very confused.

            1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • Ludic 🧛L Ludic 🧛

              Reposting a question for Ed Zitron, I'll forward responses. He asked on Bluesky and will get sub-Mastodon-tier answers:

              "This is a serious question and I would be delighted if I only hear great things but, software engineers: both before and after LLMs, how often in your professional lives have you run into software engineers that seem completely useless or lacking in basic knowledge? I hope the answer is rarely"

              Keith WansbroughK This user is from outside of this forum
              Keith WansbroughK This user is from outside of this forum
              Keith Wansbrough
              wrote last edited by
              #32

              @ludicity I worked for most of my career at a place that had a very good interview process, and pretty much everyone was competent on all the right axes. But at one point we started using some contractors from an agency and quickly realised we had to do our own screening of them. I usually asked them to code FizzBuzz in their choice of language and explain what they were doing as they did it. 20% couldn't do it at all. 30% struggled to explain their reasoning or listen to hints.

              1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • Ludic 🧛L Ludic 🧛

                Reposting a question for Ed Zitron, I'll forward responses. He asked on Bluesky and will get sub-Mastodon-tier answers:

                "This is a serious question and I would be delighted if I only hear great things but, software engineers: both before and after LLMs, how often in your professional lives have you run into software engineers that seem completely useless or lacking in basic knowledge? I hope the answer is rarely"

                Adam ♿V This user is from outside of this forum
                Adam ♿V This user is from outside of this forum
                Adam ♿
                wrote last edited by
                #33

                @ludicity all I am learning here is I better brush up on FizzBuzz if I want to do an interview again.

                Will send you a better answer privately, maybe.

                1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • daniel:// stenberg://B daniel:// stenberg://

                  @ondrej @icing @ludicity lots of peeps these days do OSS as part of their job, not for fun. They found a bug or fixed something on behalf of their employer. Enterprise style. This allows the same set of incompetence, but perhaps at a lower frequency.

                  Stefan EissingI This user is from outside of this forum
                  Stefan EissingI This user is from outside of this forum
                  Stefan Eissing
                  wrote last edited by
                  #34

                  @bagder @ondrej @ludicity Contributing to open source means lots of people may see your code. I‘d assume that many take extra care because of this.

                  The worst engineer I‘ve met kept „their“ code always close to their chest. In „their“ branch/repository, etc. 💁🏻‍♂️

                  Nils Goroll 🕊️:varnishcache:S 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • Ludic 🧛L Ludic 🧛

                    Reposting a question for Ed Zitron, I'll forward responses. He asked on Bluesky and will get sub-Mastodon-tier answers:

                    "This is a serious question and I would be delighted if I only hear great things but, software engineers: both before and after LLMs, how often in your professional lives have you run into software engineers that seem completely useless or lacking in basic knowledge? I hope the answer is rarely"

                    ramblingsteveR This user is from outside of this forum
                    ramblingsteveR This user is from outside of this forum
                    ramblingsteve
                    wrote last edited by
                    #35

                    @ludicity you can spot club members because they wear a badge with "IBM" written on it.

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • Ludic 🧛L Ludic 🧛

                      Reposting a question for Ed Zitron, I'll forward responses. He asked on Bluesky and will get sub-Mastodon-tier answers:

                      "This is a serious question and I would be delighted if I only hear great things but, software engineers: both before and after LLMs, how often in your professional lives have you run into software engineers that seem completely useless or lacking in basic knowledge? I hope the answer is rarely"

                      draconachtD This user is from outside of this forum
                      draconachtD This user is from outside of this forum
                      draconacht
                      wrote last edited by
                      #36

                      @ludicity i'm a bit worried about confirmation bias here, though of course incompetence has existed and will continue to exist. the difference between a competent and incompetent engineer isn't decided by the tools that they have access to but the time they choose / are afforded to develop competency and how well they have learned-to-learn.

                      that said, while there isn't a quantitative difference in incompetence engineers, there is a qualitative difference in incompetent engineering. expensive AI licenses move wealth from labour to capital and give management hacks a license to demand specific things from engineers at a specific rate. some of the heaviest AI users ive seen are the junior enggs and interns, and while they werent able to answer questions about what they wrote pre-LLMs either, now it's buried in an amount of noise and unaccountability that makes it hard to catch these pitfalls during code reviews.

                      LLMs dont make people incompetent the moment you touch them. they change the amount of code, plausibly functional code mind you, that you can create in a given amount of time. this reduces the amount of time seniors can spend in design, reviewing, and talent building, and hinders the processes that (sometimes) build competence out of incompetence. i'm not a full-time-hater of LLMs, but i do worry about the real damage they do to enterprise engineering processes moreso than the engineers themselves.

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • Ludic 🧛L Ludic 🧛

                        Reposting a question for Ed Zitron, I'll forward responses. He asked on Bluesky and will get sub-Mastodon-tier answers:

                        "This is a serious question and I would be delighted if I only hear great things but, software engineers: both before and after LLMs, how often in your professional lives have you run into software engineers that seem completely useless or lacking in basic knowledge? I hope the answer is rarely"

                        PozorvlakP This user is from outside of this forum
                        PozorvlakP This user is from outside of this forum
                        Pozorvlak
                        wrote last edited by
                        #37

                        @ludicity I can't think of any. A few who weren't very good; a couple who spammed the codebase with buggy code that took considerable effort to clean up; and one or two who were good at day-to-day programming but didn't know much computer science, so sometimes wrote code with terrible big-O. But nobody who was "completely lacking in basic knowledge". I've interviewed a few candidates who appeared not to be able to code, but maybe they just couldn't code *in interviews*?

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • Sass, DavidS Sass, David

                          @buherator @ludicity I have run into security engineers a couple of times matching that description.

                          buheratorB This user is from outside of this forum
                          buheratorB This user is from outside of this forum
                          buherator
                          wrote last edited by
                          #38
                          @sassdawe @ludicity 100%, I definitely not meant to piss on sw engineers in particular, median skill isn't great industry-wide.
                          1 Reply Last reply
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                          • DrikanisD Drikanis

                            @ludicity For the record, I work at a software company that employs ~10k developers.

                            Before LLMs, I'd encounter such engineers a couple of times a month, but I interact with a lot of engineers, specifically the ones that need help or are new at the company or industry at large, so it's a selected sample. Even the most inexperienced ones are willing and able to learn with some guidance.

                            After LLMs, there's been a significant uptick, and these new ones are grossly incompetent, incurious, impatient, and behave like addicts if their supply of tokens is at all interrupted. If they run out of prompt credits, its an emergency because they claim they can't do any work at all. They can't even explain the architecture of what they are making anymore, and can't even file tickets or send emails without an LLM writing it for them, and they certainly lack in any kind of reading comprehension.

                            It's bleak and depressing, and makes me want to quit the industry altogether.

                            Julien Avérous – 🇫🇷🇪🇺🇺🇦J This user is from outside of this forum
                            Julien Avérous – 🇫🇷🇪🇺🇺🇦J This user is from outside of this forum
                            Julien Avérous – 🇫🇷🇪🇺🇺🇦
                            wrote last edited by
                            #39

                            @drikanis @ludicity Similar experience here. More and more people cannot function without an LLM prompt ready to answer to them, they totally lost any autonomy. If you ask anything to them, they will basically give you the output of their LLM, instead of formulating an answer by themselves, even when they know the answer. It’s pure cocaine.

                            A 1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • DrikanisD Drikanis

                              @ludicity For the record, I work at a software company that employs ~10k developers.

                              Before LLMs, I'd encounter such engineers a couple of times a month, but I interact with a lot of engineers, specifically the ones that need help or are new at the company or industry at large, so it's a selected sample. Even the most inexperienced ones are willing and able to learn with some guidance.

                              After LLMs, there's been a significant uptick, and these new ones are grossly incompetent, incurious, impatient, and behave like addicts if their supply of tokens is at all interrupted. If they run out of prompt credits, its an emergency because they claim they can't do any work at all. They can't even explain the architecture of what they are making anymore, and can't even file tickets or send emails without an LLM writing it for them, and they certainly lack in any kind of reading comprehension.

                              It's bleak and depressing, and makes me want to quit the industry altogether.

                              SheogorathS This user is from outside of this forum
                              SheogorathS This user is from outside of this forum
                              Sheogorath
                              wrote last edited by
                              #40

                              @drikanis @ludicity it's a good time to become a carpenter. Being able to build a house from scratch seems to become more relevant these days.

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • Ludic 🧛L Ludic 🧛

                                Reposting a question for Ed Zitron, I'll forward responses. He asked on Bluesky and will get sub-Mastodon-tier answers:

                                "This is a serious question and I would be delighted if I only hear great things but, software engineers: both before and after LLMs, how often in your professional lives have you run into software engineers that seem completely useless or lacking in basic knowledge? I hope the answer is rarely"

                                donD This user is from outside of this forum
                                donD This user is from outside of this forum
                                don
                                wrote last edited by
                                #41

                                @ludicity Completely useless? Not a lot, either pre/post, but I mostly worked in safety related industries. There were/are quite a few, which seemed to lack any kind of foresight or initiative.
                                AI use is picking up steam though, and I do see people outsourcing their thinking, sometimes live during a meeting (and getting obsolete data because of that).

                                People that are unable to see risks in software will use GenAI to generate a lot of security issues. Not looking forward to cleaning those up.

                                1 Reply Last reply
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                                • Stefan EissingI Stefan Eissing

                                  @bagder @ondrej @ludicity Contributing to open source means lots of people may see your code. I‘d assume that many take extra care because of this.

                                  The worst engineer I‘ve met kept „their“ code always close to their chest. In „their“ branch/repository, etc. 💁🏻‍♂️

                                  Nils Goroll 🕊️:varnishcache:S This user is from outside of this forum
                                  Nils Goroll 🕊️:varnishcache:S This user is from outside of this forum
                                  Nils Goroll 🕊️:varnishcache:
                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #42

                                  @icing @bagder @ondrej @ludicity that ^^

                                  i get to look at closed, "proprietary" code regularly and i am yet to see it match even the basic quality level of the average open source project.

                                  plus, in many cases, it's more "plagiary" than proprietary.

                                  so exactly what LLMs are good at.

                                  1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • Ludic 🧛L Ludic 🧛

                                    Reposting a question for Ed Zitron, I'll forward responses. He asked on Bluesky and will get sub-Mastodon-tier answers:

                                    "This is a serious question and I would be delighted if I only hear great things but, software engineers: both before and after LLMs, how often in your professional lives have you run into software engineers that seem completely useless or lacking in basic knowledge? I hope the answer is rarely"

                                    LandwombleL This user is from outside of this forum
                                    LandwombleL This user is from outside of this forum
                                    Landwomble
                                    wrote last edited by
                                    #43

                                    @ludicity bear in mind a lot of tech companies are casually relocating PM talent into SWE. Happened at the huge huge tech co I work for. All of a sudden I'm expected to start building things. Never been a coder. But it's fine because AI will help, right? Everyone needs to pay their mortgage and the job market is hard right now. So here we are.

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • Ludic 🧛L Ludic 🧛

                                      Reposting a question for Ed Zitron, I'll forward responses. He asked on Bluesky and will get sub-Mastodon-tier answers:

                                      "This is a serious question and I would be delighted if I only hear great things but, software engineers: both before and after LLMs, how often in your professional lives have you run into software engineers that seem completely useless or lacking in basic knowledge? I hope the answer is rarely"

                                      PingZingP This user is from outside of this forum
                                      PingZingP This user is from outside of this forum
                                      PingZing
                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #44

                                      @ludicity I'd say "occasionally", and the rate at which it occurs is notably distinct between different kinds of workplaces. The more enterprisey, the more likely.

                                      Also, interview candidates seem disproportionately more likely to be terrible, but that at least makes sense--the less competent folks are more likely to be interviewing, right?

                                      I wouldn't say I've noticed much different pre- and post-LLMs, but I HAVE noticed that post-LLM, you've got a lot of people uncritically drinking the Kool-Aid.

                                      1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • Ludic 🧛L Ludic 🧛

                                        Reposting a question for Ed Zitron, I'll forward responses. He asked on Bluesky and will get sub-Mastodon-tier answers:

                                        "This is a serious question and I would be delighted if I only hear great things but, software engineers: both before and after LLMs, how often in your professional lives have you run into software engineers that seem completely useless or lacking in basic knowledge? I hope the answer is rarely"

                                        knowuhK This user is from outside of this forum
                                        knowuhK This user is from outside of this forum
                                        knowuh
                                        wrote last edited by
                                        #45

                                        @ludicity

                                        We must welcome folks with no experience, and not deride them as being “useless”.

                                        Lack of compassion and human engagement, and the capitalists dream of the 10x hero programmer got us into this mess.

                                        It’s your job to develop your team. Train them. Believe in them. Support them.

                                        It’s not a pissing contest.

                                        Ludic 🧛L 1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • Ludic 🧛L Ludic 🧛

                                          Reposting a question for Ed Zitron, I'll forward responses. He asked on Bluesky and will get sub-Mastodon-tier answers:

                                          "This is a serious question and I would be delighted if I only hear great things but, software engineers: both before and after LLMs, how often in your professional lives have you run into software engineers that seem completely useless or lacking in basic knowledge? I hope the answer is rarely"

                                          O This user is from outside of this forum
                                          O This user is from outside of this forum
                                          Anton Gerasimov
                                          wrote last edited by
                                          #46

                                          @ludicity I've worked with people of a wide range of abilities, but not sure I can describe any of my former or present colleagues as completely useless. I've seen managers who were useless or worse than useless for sure though

                                          1 Reply Last reply
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