Personally, I don’t believe I can be replaced. I use AI tools every day, and they’re great. Like a smart autocomplete or a really good rubber duck but I see them as assistants, not substitutes.
I think people deeply immersed in their field understand the nuance and artistry of what they do. It’s like when Ben Affleck said actors can’t be replaced by AI - yet in the same breath dismissed VFX artists. Clip: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ypURoMU3P3U&t=2s
So I'm uncertain weather I'm over estimating my 'artistry' and the industry just thinks of my profession of as a Gihbli picture. I’d really like to hear thoughts from fellow software engineers and especially from those in management or leadership positions. How are you feeling about all this?
Recent clip that sparked this: https://www.youtube.com/shorts/N2R4-d8YJZw
and Shopify CEO Memo: https://techcrunch.com/2025/04/07/shopify-ceo-tells-teams-to-consider-using-ai-before-growing-headcount
markus_zhang•2d ago
I work as a data engineer, and I'm pretty sure that the current AI is good enough to do around at least 50% of my work. I look around and believe the same applies to my data analyst colleagues as well.
I believe stakeholder-facing engineers are the first to get hit, like data engineers and frontend developers. The reasons are:
- In general their work isn't very technical (it can be, but not common) and often repetitive. There are tons of examples and documentation online.
- They face business stakeholders directly. The communication is not always smooth, so the stakeholders have the incentive to train themselves talking to AI trying to get things done ASAP.
datadrivenangel•1d ago