@The_Daveads Yeah
This is a no brainer π.
There are absolutely some sensitive parts, especially databases and parts that integrate with other systems or APIβs that should be hand coded
The engineers who'll survive the next 2 years aren't learning AI.
They're automating themselves out of busywork.
Start with the task you hate most. The one that takes 30 mins every day.
In 2027, engineers won't compete on grunt work. They'll compete on actual problem solving
@The_Daveads yeah, good engineers will always be needed for design and architecture, but not necessarily for implementation, because of AI(as it gets better)
Built AI verification into @sellperview
Before: Advertisers manually checked every proof of work
After: AI verifies in seconds
The system compares screenshots, extracts view counts, auto-approves matches.
Advertisers save hours. Publishers get paid faster.
Automate with AI
Most companies/people don't know when to use AI.
The pattern is simple
Just look for:
β Manual clicks
β Document reviews
β Image checks
β Log monitoring
If a human(or you) repeat it daily, it can be automated with AI.
What would you automate first?
#AI#Automation
Most companies/people don't know when to use AI.
The pattern is simple
Just look for:
β Manual clicks
β Document reviews
β Image checks
β Log monitoring
If a human(or you) repeat it daily, it can be automated with AI.
What would you automate first?
#AI#Automation
Speed isn't the problem. Ignoring the boring stuff is. Security, Architecture, Error handling. The things nobody posts about. You can ship fast AND build it right. But only if you actually decide to.
#software#softwareenginering
"Ship early" has become an excuse. AI can take you from idea β MVP β production in a weekend. But most of what's getting shipped right now is quietly broken β unscalable, insecure, one bad day away from failing at the worst time.
Controversial take: stop grinding hobby projects.
Get hired first.
A real job teaches you:
β how code survives other humans
β tools you'd never pick yourself
β what accountability actually feels like
Paid work hits different. You go the extra mile because you have to.
@sflorimm Don't listen too much to "just ship it" talk, if you've validated a great idea, spend time building and refining the tech behind it for scaleability and sustainability. Its gonna help you later on when you get tons of usersπ
The future of apps isn't better UI. It's less UI.
Built a banking app where AI performs actions FOR you β transfers, beneficiaries, transaction history β all from a single chat.
You talk. The app obeys.
#SoftwareEngineering
Most MVPs fail before launch β not because of the idea, but because the backend took forever.
I've shipped full backends in under a day using Supabase.
Auth, Postgres DB, Real-time, Storage, Auto-generated APIs- all included.
If you're building an MVP ship faster with supabase
I built a small package called "qit" that's been saving me tons of time.
It combines git add, commit, and push into one command. Just qit "your message" and you're done.
Simple, but you won't realize how much faster your workflow gets until you try it.
https://t.co/y7EW9qa0wW