this post was submitted on 27 Apr 2026
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You propose we do what exactly with AI?
And I’m not ignoring “rapid deskilling”. I’m specifically arguing against the very specific point that TFA made that “we will forget how to code”. That’s clearly not what will happen.
Some people today still know assembler. Some people still how to design CPUs. Some still know lithography. Not as many as before, because we just don’t have the need.
I marvel at the number of engineers who don’t think about memory allocations at all. But it’s ok - they probably don’t need to, for the task they’re solving.
I'm not proposing anything. That's a whole different conversation. I'm not proposing ways to fix climate change either. Doesn't mean they aren't bad.
Corporate-backed vibecode tools want coders to cease thinking about their own code, which is different from software engineers not being able to build hardware. Apples and oranges.
The point was that we don't know what we're going to need in 10 years but we can see that we're deskilling what we have with no guarantee that AI will fill the gap.
That means if AI doesn't neatly fill that gap in 10 years, because it measurably does not now, we've lost the institutional knowledge and that can take a long time to recover from.
The net result is that we're replacing competence with a thing that is measurably incompetent and while the odd individual company may benefit, the net result is that we're collectively moving backwards with the hype-fueled hope that something will save us in the future.
It may be just another abstraction layer, but it could just as easily be a dead end. We won't know until the future, but we're burning the capability today.
I'm optimistic about AI, but this is a huge risk to take as a country and the people making that decision are ones that stand to benefit today regardless of the outcome to us all in the future.
If only we has a functioning political system to grapple with this issue... Maybe the EU will manage better.
(Until then I'll learn a bit of German and Mandarin.)
The market isn't perfect at matching needs and abilities. We famously have a shortage of COBOL programmers, which is crazy given how much of our infrastructure still depends on it. A Nobel prize winner predicted that radiogists would be obsolete eight years ago, and we've been suffering a shortage ever since because people believed him and stopped studying it.
The most interesting argument I've heard is that vibe coding is to coding, what baby formula was to breastfeeding. When formula was introduced, it took only one generation for us to lose a lot of the generational wisdom and cultural infrastructure surrounding nursing.
We haven't completely forgotten COBOL, or radiology, or breastfeeding, and technically speaking, we won't completely forget coding, either. But we might forget enough that it becomes a huge problem when we need to remember.