トランスクリプトEnglish

AI killed the joy of coding

20m 20s4,729 単語636 segmentsEnglish

全トランスクリプト

0:00

Yeah. So, I've been seeing a lot of

0:01

YouTube videos kind of pop up of people,

0:03

developers talking about their

0:04

experience with AI and how the current

0:07

state of things is just not that

0:08

enjoyable and people are actually kind

0:10

of stressed out about it. I'm going to

0:11

go through a couple of videos and then

0:12

also just give my opinions on the

0:14

current state of AI in this industry

0:17

because I do think it has changed a lot

0:19

and I have my own opinions on like is

0:20

this even enjoyable anymore? Like is

0:22

this a fun career to do where you're

0:23

just basically prompting Claude Code all

0:25

day or you're prompting Codeex to have

0:27

it do all the work for you and review

0:29

the work. I'm not going to wash through

0:30

these and do reactions. I'm just going

0:31

to kind of give a quick like overview.

0:33

This guy basically took a break, a

0:35

sbatical for like a month from his job

0:37

because he just felt like he was just

0:39

spending so much time multitasking and

0:41

context switching by managing all these

0:43

agents trying to implement the code and

0:45

have another agent basically do code

0:47

reviews and another one do dependency

0:49

updates. And I think his main point was

0:51

like, okay, like the way that we used to

0:52

code where you actually like go heads

0:54

down and like try to figure out a hard

0:55

bug and solve it. It's been distilled to

0:58

like prompting Cloud Code to basically

0:59

do it for you and then like you're

1:01

waiting for Claude Code to finish and in

1:02

the meantime you have to find other

1:04

things to kick off to fill in that void

1:06

of space which I'll put all these videos

1:08

in the description below if you guys

1:10

want to check them out. But I I think

1:11

I'm seeing a lot of these like this is

1:13

uh Maximillion. I also watch him as

1:14

well. He's a really good creator. He

1:16

makes a ton of tutorials. his his title

1:18

is it was more fun before AI and I think

1:21

a lot of people are also kind of feeling

1:23

this way like if you've been in the

1:24

industry for a while which I have been

1:26

in since 2013 professionally which is

1:29

what almost 13 years now it was a lot

1:31

more enjoyable before AI for me like

1:34

there was a period where I was actually

1:35

excited about this like we could move

1:36

much faster we could be more productive

1:38

but now the AI and the models have

1:40

gotten so good that it just feels like

1:42

you're just prompting and you're not

1:44

doing any work yourself you're just

1:46

reviewing the code that the AI generates

1:49

and to not use the AI is also silly too

1:53

because like I've seen the performance

1:54

benefits and gains uh the efficiency of

1:57

using these tools to write code like

1:59

even at work it's a project that's like

2:01

600,000 lines of code or more and I had

2:03

to do a huge refactoring which would

2:05

probably have taken me like weeks to do

2:07

by hand and I just prompted cloud code

2:10

did a did a giant plan and 250 files it

2:12

changed them all it refactored

2:14

everything all the tests pass and you

2:16

know I had to come through and review

2:17

the code and do some additional changes

2:18

and reprompt and it did miss some stuff.

2:21

But we're in an age now where like you

2:24

can basically completely change your

2:26

codebase from one prompt and you could

2:28

just sip co coffee as you like watch the

2:31

uh the agents kind of go through and

2:33

after you do all this you there's no

2:35

sense of like reward before like you

2:38

would spend all this time trying to

2:39

learn how these algorithms work, how to

2:41

write code and now it's just like you

2:43

prompting your way to a solution. And I

2:45

guess there there used to be a dopamine

2:47

hit that you get by doing this, which I

2:50

just don't feel anymore. Like on all my

2:52

side projects, I don't feel like I'm

2:54

actually making them because AI is just

2:55

basically coding it all for me. And I I

2:58

get more joy going out and mowing the

3:00

lawn. Like I feel more accomplishment

3:02

doing something that's actually

3:04

physical, like mowing the lawn or I

3:06

don't know, cleaning up something like,

3:09

you know what I mean? Compared to like

3:11

just prompting an agent to kind of do

3:13

the work. Okay. This is another one.

3:15

This guy's basically talking about how

3:17

he felt like he, you know, AI's

3:19

basically made him useless because it

3:21

can basically do everything that he used

3:23

to do at his job. Okay, this guy got a

3:25

bunch of views on his, like 166,000

3:26

views. This guy Garrett Ross, uh, he's

3:29

basically talking about how challenging

3:31

it is to get into this industry right

3:33

now. Like, he got laid off after working

3:35

for a while and he's been trying to find

3:37

a job for like nine months and the

3:40

interview process is terrible. Uh, some

3:42

interviews are asking you to use AI.

3:44

Others are asking you not to use AI.

3:45

They're going to ask you like to do a

3:46

leak code problem, which if you take a

3:49

zoom out a little bit and think about

3:50

it, cla can solve most of these problems

3:53

that you're like doing in an interview.

3:54

So like why are we being asked how to do

3:56

leak code questions that are kind of

3:58

silly, right? Like fsbuzz, all these

4:00

other things. like yeah they do test

4:02

your knowledge in coding but the the

4:04

industry is changing and I think it's

4:05

going to take a while for you know

4:06

coders to actually start realizing like

4:08

what's actually important because

4:10

knowing how to do some of this

4:12

implementation detail is honestly just

4:14

kind of become commoditized that it's

4:15

not really important anymore. I mean

4:16

this guy even blew a blood vessel in his

4:18

eye he's so stressed trying to find a

4:19

job. Cody codes another one worst job

4:21

market in 26 years. Yeah. So what are my

4:23

opinions on what's kind of going on? I'm

4:24

going to play a little bit of Runescape

4:26

as I kind of talk because I found this

4:27

is actually pretty cathartic. I used to

4:29

play this game back when I was a kid,

4:31

like in like when I was nine years old

4:32

or 10 years old. And uh I picked it back

4:35

up recently. It's been kind of fun just

4:36

kind of uh mindlessly clicking on things

4:39

and watching my character level up,

4:41

right? I get more accomplishment

4:43

watching a virtual character level up

4:45

than I do prompting Claude Code to add

4:47

features to my codebase. Uh that's the

4:49

unfortunate truth. So, let's talk about

4:51

my opinions on like where where the

4:54

current state of things are. I mean, I

4:55

do have a course which I talk about how

4:58

to use agentic coding and how to use

4:59

these tools. So, I do think that it is

5:01

super important to learn how to use

5:02

these tools, but unfortunately, I think

5:04

when you've been in the industry for so

5:06

long and you're so used to doing things

5:08

a certain way, when AI first started

5:11

coming out, like I was super excited

5:12

about it. I'm like, "Oh, this is really

5:13

cool. I can move a lot faster. I can

5:15

implement stuff. I could probably work

5:17

on many different side projects at the

5:18

same time." But recently, I think at the

5:20

end of the last year, like I just kind

5:22

of reached a breaking point where I'm

5:23

like, "This is no longer fun." like it's

5:25

no longer fun to prompt uh these agents

5:28

to do all the work for me. Like I'm not

5:30

feeling a sense of accomplishment

5:31

anymore like I used to. I will say that

5:34

if you're like new coming into the

5:36

industry, I'm guessing that you don't

5:38

feel this way because now you have like

5:40

this tool that can help you be a lot

5:42

more productive and efficient that you

5:44

didn't even know like how to code

5:46

beforehand, but now you can actually

5:48

ship features. But me, I've been doing

5:49

this for 13 years and I'm like looking

5:52

at it from a different angle where the

5:55

sense of reward that I used to get from

5:56

coding is gone. Like I used to spend a

5:58

lot of time trying to become really good

5:59

at typing. Like my words per minute was

6:01

like 150. I was actually training that

6:02

to become really good at coding fast. I

6:04

got really good at using my IDE, opening

6:07

files, diving in the codebase,

6:09

refactoring stuff. Um, I got really good

6:12

at understanding code and, you know, web

6:14

development at least. I'm not like a

6:15

super awesome coder, but I spent a ton

6:17

of time like learning all these

6:19

different frameworks and languages and

6:21

libraries and how to become really

さらにアンロック

無料でサインアップしてプレミアム機能にアクセス

インタラクティブビューア

字幕を同期させ、オーバーレイを調整し、完全な再生コントロールでビデオを視聴できます。

無料でサインアップしてアンロック

AI要約

動画コンテンツ、キーポイント、および重要なポイントのAI生成された要約を即座に取得します。

無料でサインアップしてアンロック

翻訳

ワンクリックでトランスクリプトを100以上の言語に翻訳します。任意の形式でダウンロードできます。

無料でサインアップしてアンロック

マインドマップ

トランスクリプトをインタラクティブなマインドマップとして視覚化します。構造を一目で理解できます。

無料でサインアップしてアンロック

トランスクリプトとチャット

動画コンテンツについて質問します。AIを利用してトランスクリプトから直接回答を得られます。

無料でサインアップしてアンロック

トランスクリプトをもっと活用する

無料でサインアップして、インタラクティブビューア、AI要約、翻訳、マインドマップなどをアンロックしてください。クレジットカードは不要です。

    AI killed the joy of coding - 全文書き起こし | YouTubeTranscript.dev