My consulting company is literally talking about nothing else. It’s fucking awful.
Mine also mentioned it on the last company retreat. That it’s important to look into using AI tools and not get “left behind”. Old geezers who don’t code anymore who think this is something we want to work with.
I’m fine with using AI as some sort of dynamic snippets tool where I myself know what I want the code to look like in the end, and where you don’t have to predefine those snippets. But not to write entire apps for me.
I don’t even use regular dumb snippets. It’s so easy to write code without them, why should I dumb myself down.
Consulting companies are ghouls in my opinion. 🤷♂️
I’m in IT consulting. I have personally done some really cool shit for my clients. Things they didn’t have the talent to do themselves. Business management consulting and tax audit consulting is a completely different story. I don’t help automate away jobs. I’m not presenting decks to strip companies and governments for parts. Needless to say, not all consulting is created equally and my hope is that there comes a time where this bubble bursts this push for AI dies on the vine.
Not trying to be snarky but what’s the difference between IT consulting and MSP? The line is blurry I think
We help them build solutions that they then maintain and own. I’m in analytics. So we’re doing data engineering, security, and delivery.
Just to add the difference. Managed solutions typically has the consulting firm managing the maintenance. In some cases, they take over an existing solution vs the consulting company building something.
My company told us we need to get prior approval before using AI tools at our company
Same, but they did set up a self hosted instance for us to use and, tbh, it works pretty good.
I think it’s s good tool specifically for helping when you dunno what’s going on, to help with brainstorming or exploring different solutions. Getting recommended names of tools, finding out “how do other people solve this”, generating documentation, etc
But for very straightforward tasks where you already know what you are doing, it’s not helpful, you already know what code you are going to write anyways.
Right tool for the right job.
I use it as a form of google, basically. I ask it coding questions a lot, some of which are a bit more philosophical. I never allow it to write code for me, though. Sometimes I’ll have it check my work
I can’t even get it to help with configurations most of the time. It gives commands that don’t exist in that OS version, etc.
Not in the work force anymore but these accounts remind me of other influences that were foisted on me and my coworkers over the span of my software career. A couple I remember by name were Agile and Yourdon Structured Design, but there were a bunch more.
In the old days somebody in management would attend a seminar or get a sales presentation or something and come back with a new “methodology” we were supposed to use. It typically took the form of a stack of binders full of documentation, and was always going to make our productivity “skyrocket”. We would either follow some rigorous process or just go through the motions, or something in between, and in say 6 months to a year the manager would have either left the company or forgotten all about it.
It sounds like today’s managers are cut from about the same mold as always, and AI is yet another shiny object being dangled in front of them.