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UN warns of record 'climate imbalance' as planetary warming accelerates

https://news.un.org/en/story/2026/03/1167178
1•geox•16s ago•0 comments

Veevo Health – book a CT angiogram to see plaque buildup in your arteries

1•arvindsr33•1m ago•0 comments

American Aviation Is Near Collapse

https://www.theatlantic.com/newsletters/2026/03/aviation-failures-tsa-dhs-shutdown/686505/
1•JumpCrisscross•2m ago•0 comments

Ask HN: Are you also getting more angry with Claude as you use it for longer?

1•kykat•3m ago•0 comments

SpaceX to Expand Starlink's Mobile Coverage

https://sherwood.news/tech/spacex-to-expand-startlinks-mobile-coverage-as-it-seeks-usd1-75-trilli...
1•avonmach•3m ago•0 comments

Show HN: A game to teach teenagers coding in the age of AI

https://prompt-paradox.vercel.app/
1•baristaGeek•4m ago•0 comments

Viral DOGE Deposition Videos Can Remain Online, Judge Rules

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-03-23/viral-doge-deposition-videos-can-remain-online...
3•toomuchtodo•5m ago•1 comments

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman Exits Helion Energy's Board

https://www.reuters.com/sustainability/boards-policy-regulation/openai-ceo-sam-altman-exits-helio...
3•guidoiaquinti•5m ago•0 comments

Cloudflare Details Upgrade to EPYC Turin for 2x Throughput, 50% Better Perf/Watt

https://www.phoronix.com/news/Cloudflare-Gen13-Server-Turin
1•speckx•5m ago•0 comments

Crib: Just Enough Devcontainers

https://fabiorehm.com/blog/2026/03/20/crib-just-enough-devcontainers/
1•TheTaytay•5m ago•0 comments

Housing Advocates Don't Always Get Along

https://www.insidephilanthropy.com/home/housing-advocates-dont-always-get-along-funders-should-pu...
1•viajante1882•7m ago•0 comments

The Mac screenshot tool for builders

https://www.lazyscreenshots.com/
2•abouelatta•11m ago•0 comments

SpaceX hits back at Amazon in orbital datacenter dispute

https://www.theregister.com/2026/03/23/spacex_amazon_orbital_datacenters/
2•flyaway123•13m ago•0 comments

Programatically exploring Linux /proc filesystem

https://noke3.substack.com/p/programatically-exploring-linux-proc
1•sinlesschip•13m ago•0 comments

Lc command – combines ls, cat, and nano – useful when you don't have home/end

1•codingblink•14m ago•1 comments

Show HN: I Made an Open Source Swarm IDE

https://nbardy.github.io/unleashd/
1•nbardy•18m ago•0 comments

Markd. – Open annotation for research papers

https://markd-tawny.vercel.app/
1•ahusha•18m ago•1 comments

Show HN: AI That Controls Cloudflare WAF, Stripe, and Supabase in Plain English

https://flarite.com/
1•flarite•19m ago•1 comments

LUMINA: LLM-Guided GPU Architecture Exploration via Bottleneck Analysis

https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.05904
1•matt_d•20m ago•0 comments

What I'm Learning from Aviation About Incident Preparedness

https://uptimelabs.io/articles/what-im-learning-from-aviation-about-incident-preparedness/
1•sylvainkalache•21m ago•0 comments

Language as the Architecture of General Intelligence in Humans and LLMs

https://philarchive.org/rec/HUDTOS
3•fraggler•25m ago•0 comments

We analyzed 134,000 legal AI interactions. Lawyers still win

https://haqq.ai/whitepaper/legal-ai-index
3•ai_lawyer•28m ago•1 comments

'The Karpathy Loop': 700 experiments, 2 days

https://fortune.com/2026/03/17/andrej-karpathy-loop-autonomous-ai-agents-future/
1•msolujic•28m ago•1 comments

Show HN: Pglens – Postgres MCP server that lets agents look before they query

https://github.com/janbjorge/pglens
1•jeeybee•30m ago•0 comments

Most complex cloud service dependency chain you've seen?

1•rfmoz•31m ago•0 comments

Show HN: LLMs battle it out trading futures

https://arena.dbj.is/
3•retrofuturism•34m ago•0 comments

LLM Proxy for Agent Containers

https://github.com/calebfaruki/tightbeam
2•kalib_tweli•35m ago•1 comments

A pharmacist lifestyle blogger: The 'alarming' civilian cost of war in Iran

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c3v6ld7lv9no
4•tartoran•36m ago•0 comments

Vibecoders Can't Build for Longevity

https://blog.d11r.eu/theory-building/
2•dominicq•39m ago•4 comments

Metasystemic

https://metasystemic.xyz
1•gdss•40m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

I Replaced My Devs with Agents – Part 2: What Happened to the Team

https://easylab.ai
2•buzzbyjool•11mo ago

Comments

buzzbyjool•11mo ago
Follow-up to Part 1, where I explained how we rebuilt our dev process around LLM agents at Easylab AI and stopped writing most code by hand.

The original post sparked a lot of questions — the most common being:

“Okay, but how did your developers react?”

Here’s a breakdown of what actually happened inside the team — who stayed, who didn’t, and what new skills emerged.

⸻

Some embraced it. Some left. That’s okay.

When we committed to building with agents — not just using LLMs for autocompletion, but making them first-class executors of logic — not everyone was thrilled.

Some engineers were fascinated. They saw the shift coming and wanted to be ahead of it. They became architects of multi-agent workflows, prompt designers, QA strategists, validators.

Others didn’t want to work that way. They liked writing every line, owning every detail, and were (understandably) uncomfortable giving up control to a system that feels less deterministic.

They moved on. We didn’t push them.

Like every evolution in software tooling, this one came with a natural selection effect. Not better or worse. Just different skillsets, different energy.

⸻

This isn’t no-code. It’s new-code.

Some assumed we were just automating CRUD. That’s not what happened.

The tools we use today — Claude 3.7, DeepSeek, bolt.new, role-based agents, memory stacks — aren’t trivial macros. They’re a new level of abstraction. They reason. They refactor. They test. They fail with style.

You don’t “ask the AI to do it.” You engineer constraints, context, fallbacks, tooling, and create robust systems through language.

At Easylab AI, we use context protocols, Redis-based memory layers, and model routing logic based on latency and task weight. It’s not less technical — it’s just built differently.

⸻

Did their skills atrophy?

Actually, the opposite.

Sure, they’re not practicing DSA interview puzzles every day. But they’re building systems that can write tests, simulate failure, and self-correct.

They’re learning new skills you can’t yet Google: • Prompt minimalism • Agent composability • Multi-agent state consistency • Prompt-based debugging

They think more like staff engineers than syntax solvers.

⸻

This is abstraction, not disappearance

The fear that “AI replaces engineering” misses the nuance.

This isn’t magic. It’s not cheating. It’s just abstraction — like every wave before: • Assembly to C • C to Python • Python to Terraform • Terraform to prompt-based execution

As Jensen Huang (NVIDIA CEO) said earlier this year:

“English is now the world’s most popular programming language.”

He’s not wrong. We’re just learning to write instructions that build systems — without the middle step of syntax.

⸻

One more thing

Some developers left. Most who stayed leveled up. And today, no one wants to go back.

That tells me something: It’s not easier work. It’s better work.

Happy to answer more if folks are curious.

falcor84•11mo ago
I'm not clear - is this comment the actual post, while the link that you shared is irrelevant? If so, it would have probably been more appropriate to submit this as an "AMA:" without a url.
buzzbyjool•11mo ago
Hi thanks for your comment, honestly I don't know how to do it. Thanks
falcor84•11mo ago
Oh, it's just that you can make a submission without anything in the 'url' input. Here are a couple of examples:

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=15853374

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43363056

buzzbyjool•11mo ago
thanks
JohnFen•11mo ago
> Some developers left. Most who stayed leveled up.

"Leveled up" is a subjective, loaded term. I assume what you mean here is "adapted to your way of doing things."

> And today, no one wants to go back.

Well, of course, because those who would have wanted to go back already left. This appears to be selection bias more than evidence that your approach is a good one.

To be clear, I'm not trying to imply that your approach isn't a good one. I'm just saying that the devs who remained not wanting to go back isn't evidence that it is.

buzzbyjool•11mo ago
You’re absolutely right to call that out — and I appreciate the thoughtful framing.

“Leveled up” is subjective, yes. What I meant more precisely is this: the devs who stayed stopped spending time on tasks like writing boilerplate logic or tweaking form validation, and started focusing on higher-order thinking — designing agent workflows, debugging reasoning paths, writing specs that are machine-parsable, and thinking in systems rather than syntax. That shift, in terms of skill depth and adaptability, is something I genuinely view as a level-up. But I agree, it’s through the lens of our environment.

And yes — absolutely fair on the selection bias. When I say “no one wants to go back,” I don’t mean it as proof the approach is universally better. It’s just true for our current team, within the culture and processes we’ve chosen to embrace. Those who didn’t align with this way of working left early — and I don’t hold that against them.

So your comment is a valuable nuance: internal satisfaction is a necessary condition for success, but not a sufficient one. Our team’s enthusiasm is a sign that the model can work — not that it will for everyone.

Thanks for calling it out clearly.