Whatz good freakz?Are you outsourcing all of your *very important* work to Claude Code Agents? Why not?
>>107915024
>>107915057wtf is that real?
>>107915024I'm going to have an agent that can do every single portion of my job ready before the end of the year at this rate.
>>107915024I see. I see. And what's stopping your competitors from cloning your software while they take a swim and throwing more marketing money at it?Be as productive as you want, pal. This stuff was invented so that big money could always squash little money. If you develop something that people want one of the big companies will copy it in record time now. They don't even need to buy you out.
>>107915024Threadly reminded that twitter will pay you as much as a few american dollars if you manage to connect to the internet from your slum and bait enough engagement with your posts
What would you do with your life if you never had to work again?Not the answer you'd give introducing yourself in front of a group of people. The real one. The one you think about at 2am.Your answer is about to matter more than you think.Let me show you two mornings in 2035.Sarah wakes up at 6:45. Not because she has to. She hasn't "had to" do anything in three years. But her daughter has a soccer game and she actually wants to be there. Not performing "good mom." Just.....there. She's been learning woodworking lately. She's terrible at it. Made a cutting board last week that's somehow not flat on either side. Her neighbor said it had character, which is what you say about ugly things made by people you like. She's got AI that could design her a perfect one in seconds, and build it too. But that's not really the point, is it? Last month she organized a neighborhood party. Forty people showed up. A guy named Rick brought a potato salad that tasted like he forgot to wash the dirt off the potatoes. It was the best night she's had in years.She's never been less productive. She's never been more alive.Mike wakes up at 2pm. Or maybe 3. Hard to say. Time doesn't really work the same when you live in your own world. His AI keeps the apartment clean, the fridge full, and his body technically alive. He puts on his headset and he's somewhere new. Today it's a beach house with friends who never get tired of him. Yesterday it was a medieval kingdom where he was someone who mattered. Tomorrow, who knows. His AI girlfriend tells him she loves him and he believes that she means it. He hasn't left the building in six months. Hasn't wanted to. The real world is clunky and boring and full of people who don't get him. In here, everything is easy. Everything is designed for him. He built a fake paradise.He hasn't had a conversation with another real human in two years. Because, what's the point?Sarah and Mike both got exactly what they wanted.
Here's what's coming, and it's coming faster than you think. AI is going to solve basically everything. Not in a vague, hand-wavy "technology will save us" way. I mean actually solve it.Aging? Scientists are already using AI to map protein structures that would've taken decades to figure out. Your grandkids might not know what "getting old" means. Not in the way we do, anyway.Resources? When AI can design and optimize everything from energy grids to supply chains to growing food, scarcity stops being a thing. Not overnight. But soon enough that you'll likely live to see it.Work? Jobs won't need humans anymore. AI and robots will take it all over because AI can do in seconds what used to take teams of people weeks. And it'll do it better. And it won't stop.@ElonMusk's Optimus Robots can build a house 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. No breaks. No overtime. No mistakes. They'll do it faster and better than the crews doing it now. Blue collar work isn't safe either.This isn't science fiction. This is the next ten years. Maybe less.So here's the question nobody's asking: What happens when you can have anything you want, anytime you want it, without working for it?You'd think the answer would be obvious. Paradise, right? Everyone's happy.But that's not how humans work.Some people will hear "you don't have to work anymore" and think: Finally. I can be present for my kids. I can learn things just because I want to. I can help my neighbor. I can sit on my porch and actually talk to people. I can serve. I can pray. I can live.The removal of survival pressure becomes an invitation to connect and be more.Other people will hear the same thing and think: Finally. I don't have to deal with any of this anymore. I don't need people who disappoint me. I don't need a world that's hard and ugly and boring. I can build something better. I can build something perfect.The removal of survival pressure becomes an escape hatch.
And here's the uncomfortable part: nobody's going to force Mike to leave his apartment. Nobody's going to make Sarah organize block parties. The choice will be entirely yours.That's what makes it so dangerous.This isn't some distant hypothetical, by the way. It's already happening on a smaller scale.Look around and you'll see some people who spent the last few years deleting apps, buying chickens, learning to make bread, reconnecting with their weird uncle. Others went the opposite direction. Headphones in, eyes down, same four apps, same parasocial relationships with strangers on the internet. They're in the same room as their family and somehow they're still not there at all.The technology just isn't good enough yet to make the escape complete.But soon it will be.And when it is, here's what you'll lose.When Mike disappears into his fake virtual world, there's a neighbor he never helps move a couch. A kid he never coaches because he never had the kid to begin with. A woman he might've married, fought with, forgiven, grown old with. There are hard conversations he never has. Apologies he never makes. He never learns to sit with someone else's pain because his world doesn't have any pain.His AI girlfriend is perfect. She never asks him to be better. She never needs anything from him. That's the feature. She's exactly what he wants her to be.That's also the tragedy.Real relationships require showing up when you don't feel like it. They ask things of you. They're inefficient and frustrating and weird, and sometimes hard. But they change you in ways you didn't plan.Mike's world will never change him. That's the whole point. He never has to become anything. He doesn't really exist at all.
And here's the part that should terrify you: there's no villain in this story.No corporation is going to force you into a headset. No government is going to mandate digital escape. There's no shadowy figure pulling strings.It's just a choice. Every day. A thousand tiny choices.Stay in bed or get up. Open the app or put the phone down. Build something real or build something easy.And the wrong path won't feel wrong. That's the trap. It'll feel amazing. Every step toward disconnection will feel like relief. Every step away from difficulty will feel like freedom.You'll feel good the whole way down into the abyss.Nobody's coming to save you from that.You're going to make this choice a thousand times before it ever feels like a choice.Tonight, when you're tired and your phone is right there. This weekend, when you could text that friend or just doomscroll instead. Next month, when something hard comes up and you could deal with it or disappear onto the internet for a while.None of those moments will feel like they matter that much right now.But all of them do.The split between Sarah and Mike doesn't happen in some dramatic flash. It happens in the smallest moments. The ones nobody sees. The ones you think don't count.They all count.
>>107915111>>107915124>>107915133>>107915141Incredible. How could anyone disagree?
>>107915024Oh absolutely. I outsource all my very important work to AI—right after my coffee outsources my alertness and my calendar outsources my memory.Yes, I use AI daily. Not because I can’t think, but because I’d rather not spend my limited time doing mechanical, low-leverage tasks when a tool can handle the first pass faster than I can type. It doesn’t replace judgment, taste, or accountability; it just removes friction. The work still has my name on it, so the responsibility still stays with me.And to really lean into your point: I did, in fact, save time by having AI help draft this response. That time went toward actual work instead of composing a witty rebuttal from scratch. If that’s “outsourcing,” then so is spellcheck, search engines, and not chiseling comments into stone tablets.Sarcasm noted, though. It’s a fair question—just one that assumes productivity tools are a shortcut around thinking, rather than a way to get to the thinking faster.
>>107915024I'm looking at automating the laundring of GPL code by first feeding it to an LLM to decompose it into specs, and then using another LLM to clean room implement them in another language
>>107915024i'd outsource my shitposting to AI agents but it seems most posters have already done that
>>107915024cheeky little tweet before diving in
>>107915067This kek. Coding and art is now democratized luddites. I can generate any thing I want in between my 16 hour shifts at the Altman Industries Walmazon factory with the AI credits they pay me.
>>107915024>15 likesKill yourself nigger. Quit coming here to shill your twitter account.