- cross-posted to:
- tech@lemmit.online
- programming@lemmy.ml
- technews@radiation.party
- cross-posted to:
- tech@lemmit.online
- programming@lemmy.ml
- technews@radiation.party
It’s not the 1st time a language/tool will be lost to the annals of the job market, eg VB6 or FoxPro. Though previously all such cases used to happen gradually, giving most people enough time to adapt to the changes.
I wonder what’s it going to be like this time now that the machine, w/ the help of humans of course, can accomplish an otherwise multi-month risky corporate project much faster? What happens to all those COBOL developer jobs?
Pray share your thoughts, esp if you’re a COBOL professional and have more context around the implication of this announcement 🙏
I have my doubts that this works well, every LLM we’ve seen that translates/writes code often makes mistakes and outputs garbage.
Yes, and among the mistakes, it will probably introduce some hard to find bugs/vulnerabilities.
Just ask it to also write tests, duh /s
deleted by creator
You don’t need it to be perfect, there will still be human intervention.
deleted by creator
I’m obviously saying that humans can fix the issues, not that you should be landing broken code…