As I alluded to, when that’s the case it’s still now agentic coding to blame because of the diversion of focus. Companies such as Microsoft, instead of improving their existing human-based craft, introduce literal roadblocks to the improvement of craft both in terms of time/resources and also in terms of corporate culture.
Maybe. But even if everyone banned AI instantly, the culture and (I’d argue) massive mismanagement problems aren’t getting any better.
Hence I think it’s iffy to attribute all these software problems to ‘AI’ so quickly, especially before it’s really had time to affect old systems like Microsoft Windows.
But these problems took off way before code assistants were common.
As I alluded to, when that’s the case it’s still now agentic coding to blame because of the diversion of focus. Companies such as Microsoft, instead of improving their existing human-based craft, introduce literal roadblocks to the improvement of craft both in terms of time/resources and also in terms of corporate culture.
Maybe. But even if everyone banned AI instantly, the culture and (I’d argue) massive mismanagement problems aren’t getting any better.
Hence I think it’s iffy to attribute all these software problems to ‘AI’ so quickly, especially before it’s really had time to affect old systems like Microsoft Windows.