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1•Sayuj01•1m ago•0 comments

Placebo Concert: The Placebo Effect for VR Visualization of Physiological Data

https://kaikunze.de/post/2026-01-10-placebo-concert/
1•kgarten•2m ago•0 comments

New Version of jQuery 4.0.0

https://blog.jquery.com/2026/01/
1•aanthonymax•3m ago•0 comments

Fast-ThinkAct: Efficient Vision-Language-Action Reasoning

https://jasper0314-huang.github.io/fast-thinkact/
1•gmays•4m ago•0 comments

Is Educational Technology All It's Cracked Up to Be? – A Student's Perspective

https://micahblachman.beehiiv.com/p/is-educational-technology-all-it-s-cracked-up-to-be
1•subdomain•6m ago•0 comments

Enjoy the Amateur Enhancements

https://nik.art/enjoy-the-amateur-enhancements/
1•herbertl•7m ago•0 comments

Ask HN: Can I still code by hand?

3•dudewhocodes•7m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Vouch Protocol – Open Identity for AI Agents (C2PA and Did)

2•rampy•11m ago•0 comments

Worse Than the Dot Com Bubble

https://www.wheresyoured.at/dot-com-bubble/
1•7777777phil•11m ago•0 comments

Discovering New Horizons (2015)

https://source.washu.edu/2015/12/discovering-new-horizons/
1•thunderbong•12m ago•0 comments

The cleaner: One woman's mission to help Britain's hoarders

https://www.aljazeera.com/features/2026/1/18/the-cleaner-one-womans-mission-to-help-britains-hoar...
1•Qem•13m ago•0 comments

Speed Vertigo: A New Kind of Engineering Debt

https://joshtuddenham.dev/blog/vertigo/
1•joshuaisaact•14m ago•0 comments

Making a Strava-Style Heatmap with My Citibike Ride History

https://yangdanny97.github.io/blog/2026/01/17/citibike-strava-heatmap
1•ocamoss•16m ago•0 comments

Why Newly Built Aircraft Still Have Ashtrays

https://iatanews.com/why-newly-built-aircraft-still-have-ashtrays-in-the-toilet/
2•tavro•17m ago•0 comments

Show HN: SmallPebble – minimalist deep learning library in <1000 lines of Python

https://github.com/sradc/SmallPebble
1•montebicyclelo•19m ago•1 comments

A Day Without a Mexican

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Day_Without_a_Mexican
1•treetalker•20m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Miito- Added TikTok like videos to Google Meet to fix my attention span

https://chromewebstore.google.com/detail/miito-focus-overlay-for-m/hlnfebhmljcldnhepjeiodhmijahlhcc
1•miemex•20m ago•0 comments

AI companies will fail. We can salvage something from the wreckage

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/ng-interactive/2026/jan/18/tech-ai-bubble-burst-reverse-centaur
3•kawera•22m ago•0 comments

Most-voted PR gets merged – Week 2: The Acceleration

https://blog.openchaos.dev/posts/week-2-the-acceleration
2•mraniki•23m ago•0 comments

Chinese EVs Are Coming Back to Canada Thanks to New Trade Deal

https://www.jalopnik.com/2077559/chinese-evs-coming-back-canada/
2•mattwiese•24m ago•0 comments

Hydrate Agent for Obsidian

https://hydrateagent.com/
1•javast98•25m ago•1 comments

The next-gen SQLite won't look like SQLite

https://gist.github.com/radarroark/03a0724484e1111ef4c05d72a935c42c
10•radarroark•29m ago•2 comments

Cybernetic Arbitrage – AI Is Inverting Aggregation Theory

https://hypersoren.xyz/posts/cybernetic-arbitrage/
1•dennisy•29m ago•0 comments

Study Shows Short-Form Video Is Destroying Our Brains

https://bradstulberg.substack.com/p/a-new-study-shows-short-form-video
2•andy99•30m ago•0 comments

I decided to try BASIC programming on the VIC 20 in 40 years

https://medium.com/@RetroTechShow/1984-i-decided-to-try-basic-programming-on-the-vic-20-for-the-f...
1•JKCalhoun•31m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Tiny Toy Network – a neural net to practice backpropagation

https://hollyemblem.github.io/tiny-toy-network/
1•dandelionv1bes•34m ago•0 comments

Ringmpsc: Lock-free MPSC channel in Zig achieving 50B messages/second

https://github.com/boonzy00/ringmpsc
1•g0xA52A2A•34m ago•0 comments

Bending Emacs Episode 10: AI / LLM agent-shell [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R2Ucr3amgGg
1•xenodium•35m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Go-brrr – Benchmarks Go vs. Go and declares a winner anyway

https://github.com/jackprscott/go-brrr
1•jackprescott•35m ago•0 comments

3D Map of the Moai Statue Quarry at Rano Raraku, Rapa Nui (Easter Island)

https://www.arcgis.com/apps/instant/3dviewer/index.html
2•nudin•35m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

Software engineers can no longer neglect their soft skills

https://www.qu8n.com/posts/most-important-software-engineering-skill-2026
25•quanwinn•1h ago

Comments

anon946•31m ago
The irony here is that universities are struggling to teach writing skills, due to massive cheating with AI.
LatencyKills•23m ago
I mentor CS students at two local universities. The best students are using gen ai to enhance their learning and understanding (i.e. they use it as a tool instead of a crutch). The worst students are using it in attempt to “level the playing field” and are failing miserably.

It is easy to determine if someone solved a problem using AI because they can’t explain or recreate “their” solution. Detecting cheating in essays is still far more difficult.

joshuaisaact•28m ago
This couldn't ring more true to me - I think one of the consequences of the rapid change in the profession we are seeing is that skills that typically were required only at more senior levels become required further down the stack.

If I was a junior today, I'd be studying business impact, effective communication, project management, skills that were previously something you could get away with under-indexing on until senior+.

CrulesAll•28m ago
Software 'engineers' are going to have learn the hard skills that they have gotten by without thus far. The ones who were never engineers in the first place will have to learn 'soft skills' because they are incapable. I believe @ Tsoding put it best: The only thing AI will do, in so far as coding goes, is to remove a lot of people who should never have been in it in the first place.
flitzofolov•23m ago
Can you elaborate on this?

What are some examples of skills you think are now essential, that prior have been taken for granted or obviated in some way?

CrulesAll•17m ago
Beyond engineering itself, strictly computer engineering? How many coders have no idea what goes on behind an IDE. Have not even the slightest notion how a computer works. Who thinks building a computer means watching a Youtube video and buying ready made parts, putting them together, and then think they should be employed by NASA.

To begin: Math, Linux, Devops, C, and Assembly. Not a youtube video. Not arithmetic. Learn to the point that you could be employed by any of the above as a senior. And don't fear failure. Keep doing it until you understand it.

pgwhalen•1m ago
I agree with your original post that the need for hard skills will persist, but I see it in the other direction: software engineers are going to have to get better at thinking in larger abstractions, not deeper understanding of the stack. Those who can only solve problems locally and repeat the patterns they've seen before rather than create new patterns from building blocks are the ones who are going to struggle.
alentred•16m ago
Not the original author, but I would guess that understanding the domain problem and interpreting it correctly in a software solution (not code, but a product with workflows, UX, etc.), which in turn requires ability to listen and understand and ask right questions on one hand (what a user wants to achieve), and a good understanding of the technical limitations as well as human habits on the other hand (what is possible and makes sense). One can argue that AI lacks what we'd call intuition and interpersonal qualities which are still necessary, as before AI.
ilinx•6m ago
My rule of thumb is that if you’re not measuring anything you’re not engineering. It’s not the whole picture, but to me the engineering part sometimes means being able to explain (and even quantify) why one solution is better than another.
qoez•8m ago
I think this is kinda sad. I always thought coding was so beautiful for creating a (good paying) job for socially awkward people on the spectrum who pre-coding was considered dorks and went into idk what but probably some unsatisfying job. It seems like we're heading back to that which makes me sad and worried about the highly functioning autistic population.
Xelbair•3m ago
I am sorry but is being employed a job or a daycare?

Not only this is extremely patronizing towards all people on spectrum, but at the same time extremely hurtful statement for people who are treating employment as a job(ie - most of population).

And what are you going to say to people who are stuck in low-end jobs?

EGreg•26m ago
As usual - the advice is essenially rats from a sinking ship all the way. “You all need to do this narrow thing to survive now”.

2016 to truckers: “Learn to code LOL”

2026 to coders: “Learn soft skills”

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46436872

Look, I personally am taking full advantage of exactly the skills described. I was the one who posted the above thing on HN showing how I am 20-50x more productive now, complete with a 4 hour speedrun video. I usually try not to just talk and point out current problems, but build solutions AND show (github, youtube) with specific details so you can watch it and apply it for yourself. But I am telling you:

1) most people will not adapt, so we will need UBI for those who don’t

2) eventually even those who adapt will be replaced too, so we will need UBI for everybody

It is after all a thin layer that remains. I remember Kasparov proudly talked about how “centaurs” (human + machine working together) in chess were better than machines alone… until they weren’t, and human in the loop became a liability.

But the problem is more widespread in the last 70 years. Just look around. Industry always tells the individual they can do some individual action downstream to clean up the mess they create upstream, and it is leading the entire planet into ruin:

https://magarshak.com/blog/government-and-industry-distract-...

In fact, the human population in modern environments has been living large on an ecological credit card and the bill is coming due for our children, because all the “individual responsibility” stuff — where you can somehow diet, exercise and recycle your way out of things corporations do upstream — is all a gient lie and always has been. So the negative externalities just build up until the next generation won’t be able to ignore them anymore, but it could be too late. Whether that’als day zero for water in cities, or factory farms for meat with antiobiotic resistance, or fossil fuels and greenhouse gases to subsidize the car industry, or ubiqitous microplastic plastic pollution around thr world (yes, personal plastic recycling was just another such scam designed to keep you docile and not organize to force corporations to switch to biodegradeable materials.) The “anthoposcene” is seeing a decline in insects and all species of animal except humans and farm animals. Coral reefs are bleached, kelp forests and rainforests are decimated, and governments work with industry to eg allow Patagonian forests to be burned for new developments and then smokey the bear says “only YOU can prevent forest fires”. Think about it.

joshuaisaact•22m ago
I may have misread your comment, but I don't think soft skills are a 'narrow thing' at all. Effective communication, building trust, bringing people along with you - these are fundamental to being an effective human, not some niche pivot.
CrulesAll•15m ago
"Effective communication, building trust, bringing people along with you" That's a David Brent powerpoint presentation.
joshuaisaact•3m ago
Fair. I'll retire 'bringing people along with you' before it ends up on a motivational poster with a stock photo of a rowing team.

Though you're right that there's no I in team. There is one in AI though, which probably tells us something.

dangus•19m ago
I would submit that this could be based on a stereotype that “coder = antisocial.”

Why are we assuming that people who write code don’t have soft skills?

The youngest generation who joined the profession are probably in it for the the salary versus the older generations who came from computer clubs and dungeons and dragons groups of the 1970s/1980s along with a culture where having a niche interest was socially ostracizing and uncool.

I wonder if the youngest generation entering the profession is much more of a cross section of regular people.

lordnacho•16m ago
I don't think it has ever been the case that you could neglect soft skills. You will hear this over and over, in every area of every business: people become successful by adjusting their behaviour to what works for the business. Sometimes this is called being a slick politician, sometimes it is called avoiding getting bogged down in politics.

But it's never been the case that a dev could just focus on technical things and not spend any time figuring out the context they are working in, and behaving accordingly.

My first day of work, this is what my boss said to me: "Look at this trading floor. There's screens everywhere, everything is numbers. Deltas, gammas, vegas. Everything is calculated by computers. But don't forget, every business is a people business!"

netdur•15m ago
calculators doing a perfect job did not end accountants' jobs, it made it faster.
yapyap•14m ago
You never really could. If you hear of a (very) succesful software engineer with horrid soft skills they’re a 1%er chance wise
marginalia_nu•10m ago
The sort of people who have been able to neglect their soft skills are probably still going to be able to do so in the future. But those were always the extreme intelligence outliers, generational talent type figures.

For most software engineers, neglect of soft skills have always been a career tarpit that leads nowhere. Being able to navigate social settings and to communicate well is a force multiplier. For most people, it really doesn't matter how good you are if nobody understands what you are saying and you can't convince other people to buy into your ideas. You far more often see moderately successful charlatans that are all talk than successful people with awful communication skills. Of course if you're able to talk the walk, that's when you can really go places.

lolive•8m ago
Be careful, engineers, when interacting with soft skill experts not to join their reality distortion field where it’s all about coordination, alignment, bizness strategy, clever planning. Whereas the real stuffs are just implémentation details, quickly solved.

In the end, they might convince you that 2+2=5.