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By the way this is something that happened in IT since the beginning. Programming evolved from Hardware level binary programming to assembler programming to structured programming to object oriented programming to todays Agentic AI programming. The same fear existed before - from programmers forgetting how to get most of the hardware, to bloatware memory hogs that loaded useless libraries to todays agentic AI which just moves it one step further.
I think it is inevitable, there will be some niche space for old school thinking, but it will resolve itself in time. For instance knowing some basic coding in Assembly from university is a good exercise and knowledge, but you will probably never use it outside of specific niches such as cybersecurity or firmware coding. Future good programmer will probably look quite differently from you now, but your skills would also be considered useless for programming Apollo 11 guidance system in 1969.
To be fair, these fears were 100% valid. The resources required by the average modern app are insane.
Electron has entered the chat
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That's largely a casualty of Moore's law. There's no point in optimizing candy crush to run on the Apollo guidance computer when nobody is going to run it on hardware like that.
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