Sounds ominously biblical.
we would surely like to have more than an amateur
The amateur/professional distinction isn't very good at predicting job performance. The ark was skippered by amateurs, the Titanic by professionals. At any rate, if wages (cost) is proportional to coding skill, the primary goal of Vibe and other AI nonsense is to minimize it. Noboby is going to hire real talent just to have them sit around only doing code reviews.
On the other hand, this does make a good business case for hiring in a consulting firm to do code reviews and fixes. The overhead for the talent in the form of benefits and management can be shared by multiple customers. And between product releases, these expensive devs just go away.
Even if it seems to save some money (probably not THAT much in the end), it'll still cost them.
In 10 years, the Vibe coding kids will be middle-aged vibe coders, but the entry level engineers would have been senior level engineers. Eventually, once you were ready to retire or move to management, one or more of them would have been the new you.
Instead, now when you retire, they'll be swimming in a sea of middle aged vibe coders and nobody left will have a clue how to fix the horrors that they produce. They won't be able to hire a new you from outside because the other employers followed the same strategy. They will be no replacements available.
They might be able to eek out a few more years by paying someone a king's ransom to come out of retirement for a couple years, but for obvious reasons, that won't last forever either, even if they can afford it.
Class 1 and 2 e-bikes limit assist to 20 mph, not 15. You can ride them faster than that, but you have to provide the power. 20 mph is well above what most recreational cyclists can maintain on a flat course, so if these classes arenâ(TM)t fast enough to be safe, neither is a regular bike. The performance is well within what is possible for a fit cyclist for short times , so their performance envelope is suitable for sharing bike and mixed use infrastructure like rail trails.
Class 3 bikes can assist riders to 28 mph. This is elite rider territory. There is no regulatory requirement ti equip the bike to handle those speeds safely, eg hydraulic brakes with adequate size rotors. E-bikes in this class are far more likely to pose injury risks to others. I think it makes a lot of sense to treat them as mopeds, requiring a drivers license for example.
That depends on the product. In some cases the product is perfectly good, but the reviewer doesn't understand how to use it and apparently didn't RTFM.
Or have the vibe coders check their stuff for errors and inefficiencies before committing it. Except that vibe coders were hired to fill in once the AI was installed and all the actual devs were let go.
So, ignore my suggestion and just let your company drown in the AI cesspool.
herds of cows started getting sick
... one of those cancers is testicular.
Cows don't have testicles.
Don't forget hormesis.
But I'm all for it. Cull the Gen Z idiots stumbling around in the forests.
Would treating them as mopeds be so bad?
What weâ(TM)re looking at is exactly what happened when gasoline cars started to become popular and created problems with deaths, injuries, and property damage. The answer to managing those problems and providing accountability was to make the vehicles display registration plates, require licensing of drivers, and enforcing minimum safety standards on cars. Iâ(TM)m not necessarily suggesting all these things should be done to e-bikes, but I donâ(TM)t see why they shouldnâ(TM)t be on the table.
I am a lifelong cyclist , over fifty years now, and in general I welcome e-bikes getting more people into light two wheel vehicles. But I see serious danger to both e-bike riders and the people around them. There are regulatory classes which limit the performance envelope of the vehicle, but class 3, allowing assist up to 28 mph, is far too powerful for a novice cyclist. Only the most athletic cyclists, like professional tour racers, can sustain speeds like that, but they have advanced bike handling skills and theyâ(TM)re doing it on bikes that weigh 1/5 of what complete novice novice e-bike riders are on. Plus the pros are on the best bikes money can buy. If you pay $1500 for an e-bike, youâ(TM)re getting about $1200 of battery and motor bolted onto $300 of bike.
Whatâ(TM)s worse, many e-bikes which have e-bike class stickers can be configured to ignore class performance restrictions, and you can have someone with no bike handling skills riding what in effect is an electric motorcycle with terrible brakes.
E-bike classification notwithstanding, thereâ(TM)s a continuum from electrified bicycles with performance roughly what is achievable by a casi recreational rider on one end, running all the way up to electric motorcycles. If there were only such a thing as a class 1 e-bike thereâ(TM)d be little need to build a regulatory system with registration and operator licensing. But you canâ(TM)t tell by glancing at a two wheel electric vehicle exactly where on the bike to motorcycle spectrum it falls; that depends on the motor specification and software settings. So as these things become more popular, I donâ(TM)t see any alternative to having a registration and inspection system for all of them, with regulatory categories and restrictions based on the weight and hardware performance limitations of the vehicle. Otherwise youâ(TM)ll have more of the worst case weâ(TM)re already seeing: preteen kids riding what are essentially electric motorcycles that weigh as much as they do because the parents think those things are âoebikesâ and therefore appropriate toys.
You don't have situations where there are multiple power companies capable of serving a single building. On the other hand, it is possible in many jurisdictions to select your energy supplier and have the local power utility only act as an intermediary for meter reading, billing and local distribution maintenance.
What will most likely happen is that cable companies, fiber last mile providers, etc. will become telecommunications companies, handling the connection between customers and various Internet services.
We still need good guys with guns to cull deer populations.
That's a bad idea and all it should take is the realization that most grocery chains have a massive revenue but very thin profit margins.
But think of those profit margins when the (labor intensive) upstream food production processes costs go down (deductible wages) and they can pass that savings on to the grocery stores.
Get hold of portable property. -- Charles Dickens, "Great Expectations"