My ignorance is bliss I guess. Im sure you know a lot more about backend dev work than I, but I’m getting users on my SaaS and it contains about a million lines of code. At someone it will show growing pains, and at that point I’ll look into having another agent completely remake the architecture with everything built in mind. This could happen simultaneously as V1 grows.
I reckon security was much more precarious in Web 1 days when everything had a back door and could get dusted by any type of DDOs.
I also remember progs back in the AOL days that could do a ton of malicious stuff.
It’s always a cat and mouse game.
Project managers with vision are the best coders right now.
They don’t give a f about how the code or the ego behind the code.
They’re used to figuring out how to correctly say what they need from years of working with offshore talent.
Slower than what though? You’re comparing something shipped to something that would be still in its requirements phase. And costs? Dev teams are like 100X more with a huge investment.
Respectfully I don’t understand this argument.
Everyone should be building right now and not waiting for anything.
Both options seem to get you where you need to go albeit with resistance. These same issues also presented themselves previously to AI with even greater resistance.
I don’t think there’s ever been bug free code developed and I reckon half the architecture running our programs these days are hacked together after thoughts.
The last bastion of argument here. You’ll have agents spinning up simultaneous arch stacks in realtime soon and constantly optimize performance. If it knows what good design looks like it will know what good architecture looks like. In the meantime you should build and get users
It’ll be interesting when AI replaces judges and juries.
Then eventually, attorneys (since they’re all using it to make both sides of the arguments anyways).
Which means we’ll eventually just submit facts and get an outcome.
Thanks for sharing Rob. I can’t even imagine how difficult that’s been. Great to see you dedicated again. I too recently started lifting again. Took a while off as my son was battling cancer. I can’t do that anymore. If he’s fighting I have to fight my own demons. We’re all on a journey.
@PBDsPodcast as I entered the cancer ward today to visit my 8 year old son, who just went a double lung operation to remove the last of his stage 4 cancer, it’s no coincidence that the part of your podcast was playing about the dad who found out he wasn’t the dad and how heart broken he is.
Since my son’s birth I’ve moved across the world and have fought a quixotic battle to be in his life and give him the relationship he needs. Unfortunately, he’s been brainwashed by his mother to make him think that I’m has bad as the cancer.
I know that he will grow out of this but I pray he lives long enough to grow out of this.
Parental Alienation is something demonic and I believe God has put me in the position to help spread this awareness. I just wanted to say thank you for the encouraging words today.
The system is set up for men to fold. But with the grace of God we take the L’s and it makes you stronger.
As for me I will continue to show up despite the hostile environment.
This pain has lead me to develop a platform to help other men (and moms) against parental alienation.
This horrible moment will be a blessing.
I sincerely hope you read this. Thank you.