@davidfowl@aspiredotdev@sebastienros I was able to get a React Native app working with Aspire. But without terminal user interaction it's not really useful yet.
There's a really high cost of duplicating code and we're all relearning that everyday with these coding agents. Until they get better at generating reusable code, bugs will run rampant. You can't "abstract it away" with more agents. You just get crappy software....
Weโve identified a security incident that involved unauthorized access to certain internal Vercel systems, impacting a limited subset of customers.ย Please see our security bulletin:
https://t.co/0S939n3qHC
Honestly, this is the most accurate diagram I've seen.
Waterfall: You plan for 18 months and deliver exactly what nobody needs anymore.
Agile: You deliver something usable at every step, but the CEO keeps asking, "Where's the car?"
AI: You get the car on day one. It has six wheels, the doors are on backwards, and it has a rocket launcher. You spend more time making it yours than actually "building"; it's shaping. owning. verifying. That's what the best AI developers do now. They don't build. They shape and own.
With the current direction of AI, developers job will become less fun. New features will be implemented by vibe coders, leaving only legacy bugs to be fixed for real developers.
Also, the new wave of "developers" will not develop the skills to find and fix bugs themselves.
@garrytan Our job will become less fun. New features will be implemented by vibe coders, leaving only legacy bugs to be fixed for real developers.
On the other hand, the new wave of "developers" will not develop the skills to find and fix bugs themselves.