We have to face the fact that LLMs are pretty good at front-end now. In 10 years they will build entire apps and automate cloud deployment. All the developer jobs will move into ML and cybersecurity, which I don't mind since those things can be a lot of fun, but what I really want to figure out is the next legacy skill. That one thing that still has to be done manually, but no one will learn anymore, because there's a newer shiny thing to learn. The thing we will be able to charge $100 per hour for, because everything collapses without it.
some BS with no documentation that AI can't learn I guess
Purveyor of your mother.
>>106492071Monkey arms on that mofo.
>>106492093That's just how all men looked until recently. But xenoestrogens aren't real btw
>>106492086That babes got a nice badonkadonka. Love the curve. Granny's got back.
Hunted down that image is:> A male trouble-shooter untangles a jammed tape in one terminal while a female teacher changes reels in another, in the huge computer room of a school or college. Colourised version of : 10144583 Date: 1960sAppears she was a teacher and the image was colorised after the fact.Couldn't get her name doni could look up her GILF ass now she's older
>>106492242It might be possible to nudify her via AI
>>106492143Recently as in 250,000 years ago maybe
>>106492083>that AI can't learnThe only thing I can think of that could be a hard barrier is self-modifying code or code as data. So maybe LISP? Like writing custom automation for AutoCAD or something.
>>106492254The koolaid that never runs out.
>>106492143>xenoestrogens aren't realCare to elaborate?
full robotic training simulations would be the way to do it. like a framework to train robots in a million different tasks in a few hours, with slight permutations. everyone will be going crazy over generative SPA stuff while the real endgame would be robotic solvers being exposed to LLMs saying "learn how to move like this" and they instantly train in parallel over 10000 years that task within an hour, so any skill involving setting that up would be the real bread and butter.
start getting really good at x64 and maybe riscv asm
>>106493671chemicals that have the effect of estrogen basically.most common with plastics, which is why men should stay away from plastic containers, especially bottled water
>>106492071The ColdFusion guy at my workplace gets paid more than most of the other programmers. I don't know exactly how much more but his salary band is above everyone else's. ColdFusion isn't even all that old nor is it really that difficult to learn but no one wants to do it so he gets paid more because he will do it. The main reason why it won't be the new COBOL in the long run is that it's another form of webshit instead of being what the financial system runs on. Nevertheless, right now companies who rely on ColdFusion applications have to pay to find someone to support them.
>>106493671Artificial chemicals that mimic the effects of estrogen in the body. Natural ones from plants and stuff are called phytoestrogens. Interesting fact, some of them actually send a weaker signal than the body's own produced estrogen, so they actually reduce the effects of estrogen in the body by blocking the receptors from stronger sources
>>106493925I had a contract years ago to rewrite cold fusion applications in .net. Was ez