OK that’s fair. And also it’s not my intent to blame AI for all problems of software culture. Just seems in many ways we’re going backwards as an industry.
AI is a perfectly distilled example: pushing an underbaked, sometimes neat tool in completely dysfunctional time-wasting ways, from the top down, because leadership is infatuated with the dream of it, talking to other infuatuated leaders, and feeling FOMO… I guess that’s why I came off so cynical when I read this:
We have a duty as industry professionals to fight back, say no, and make sure companies are aware this “new normal” is completely and utterly unacceptable.
…But this keeps happenening.
AI wouldn’t be the infectious mess it is without underlying structural issues, and pushing back on ‘AI’ directly doesn’t really convey “you shouldn’t have shoved this down our throats in the first place, again!” I dunno how how fix that though.
EDIT: I’m definitely venting at this point, apologies.
OK that’s fair. And also it’s not my intent to blame AI for all problems of software culture. Just seems in many ways we’re going backwards as an industry.
I’d argue its a leadership culture problem.
AI is a perfectly distilled example: pushing an underbaked, sometimes neat tool in completely dysfunctional time-wasting ways, from the top down, because leadership is infatuated with the dream of it, talking to other infuatuated leaders, and feeling FOMO… I guess that’s why I came off so cynical when I read this:
…But this keeps happenening.
AI wouldn’t be the infectious mess it is without underlying structural issues, and pushing back on ‘AI’ directly doesn’t really convey “you shouldn’t have shoved this down our throats in the first place, again!” I dunno how how fix that though.
EDIT: I’m definitely venting at this point, apologies.