• altcunn 12 minutes ago

    Interesting signal from IBM. The "AI will replace all junior devs" narrative never accounted for the fact that you still need humans who understand the business domain, can ask the right questions, and can catch when the AI is confidently wrong. Turns out institutional knowledge doesn't just materialize from a model — you need people learning on the job to build it.

    • mathattack 17 hours ago

      Interesting given the current age discrimination lawsuit:

      https://www.cohenmilstein.com/case-study/ibm-age-discriminat...

      • notepad0x90 17 hours ago

        Another one? What is it with IBM, they must really save lots of money in a way no one else has figured out by firing people at 50yo. This is like the 3rd or 4th one i've heard from them.

      • alienbaby an hour ago

        "software engineers will spend less time on routine coding—and more on interacting with customers"

        Ahh, what could possibly go wrong!

        • Insanity 5 minutes ago

          Customer interaction has imo always been one of the most important parts in good engineering organizations. Delegating that to Product Managers adds unnecessary friction.

          • Nextgrid 38 minutes ago

            Why is that bad? You write better code when you actually understand the business domain and the requirement. It's much easier to understand it when you get it direct from the source than filtered down through dozens of product managers and JIRA tickets.

            • Insanity 4 minutes ago

              Not sure why this is being downvoted. It’s spot on imo. Engineers who don’t want to understand the domain and the customers won’t be as effective in an engineering organization as those who do.

              It always baffles me when someone wants to only think about the code as if it exists in a vacuum. (Although for junior engineers it’s a bit more acceptable than for senior engineers).

              • secondcoming 34 minutes ago

                Programmers have an unfortunate tendancy to be too honest!

              • optimalsolver 40 minutes ago
              • xhkkffbf 13 minutes ago

                Perhaps I'm being cynical, but could they be leaving out some detail? Perhaps they're replacing even more older workers with entry level workers than before? Maybe the AI makes the entry level workers just as good-- and much cheaper.

                • jerlam a day ago

                  Probably not on the IBM jobs site yet, where the number of entry level jobs is low compared to the size of the company (~250k):

                  https://www.ibm.com/careers/search?field_keyword_18[0]=Entry...

                  Total: 240

                  United States: 25

                  India: 29

                  Canada: 15

                  • google234123 19 hours ago

                    Aren't those general jobs opening. Like junior swe only needs a single generic posting for all positions

                  • Nextgrid an hour ago

                    Bold move.

                    Not because it's wrong, but because it risks initiating the collapse of the AI bubble and the whole "AI is gonna replace all skilled work, any day now, just give us another billion".

                    Seems like IBM can no longer wait for that day.

                    • int0x29 20 minutes ago

                      Is IBM invested big in LLMs? I don't get the impression they have much to lose there.

                      • bayindirh 14 minutes ago

                        Their CEO already said what he's thinking about all the spending [0].

                        [0]: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46124324

                        • platevoltage 32 minutes ago

                          Good. Nobody needs to rip that bandaid off. Might as well be IBM.

                          • brianwawok an hour ago

                            I mean it’s IBM. On average, 70% of their decisions are bad ones. Not sure I’d pay a single bit of attention to what they do.

                            • bayindirh 17 minutes ago

                              Yeah, they are only 114 years old. How they can have the knowledge to stay afloat in trying times like this?

                              • Nextgrid 35 minutes ago

                                To a non-technical individual IBM is still seen as a reputable brand (their consulting business would've been bankrupt long ago otherwise) and they will absolutely pay attention.

                            • ChrisArchitect 16 hours ago
                              • dang an hour ago

                                Thanks - we-ve merged that thread hither.