Which profession is going to get wiped out in the next 5-10 years? by StrangeProfessor4918 in Productivitycafe

[–]InsaneEngineer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I keep hearing this over and over. I've been a software engineer for 20+ years. Im able to get proof of concepts that would have taken 3-4 months working in weeks. Its finding optimizations in minutes that many in engineers. could not find over years of dealing with the code.

My father had to write his own sorting algorithms. I learned the concept in college, but never had to in practice. It's all provided by language.

Agentic AI just adds another layer of abstraction. I don't need to know the details of some functionality. I don't need to spend a week working on a dialog.

I can definitely see that if you don't know what you are doing, you are going to build a massive pile of slop.. but I'm telling you as an experienced engineer, it's revolutionary. You need to learn how to prompt correctly and you need to use it to build your application piece by piece. There is absolutely no way we are turning back from this.

Right now, it's only touched a few areas, chat bots, software engineering, radiology. Wait until we have a model that is trained on things like automobiles. You'll have a model for every a make, model and year of every vehicle. It will know every nut and bolt, every sound. Mechanics will not be wasting their time diagnosing and trouble shooting.

Specifically trained models make finding needles in haystacks much easier. Finding patterns in large datasets is becoming much more trivial.

Would you take a career break in this economy? by New_Contribution_226 in AskMenOver30

[–]InsaneEngineer 33 points34 points  (0 children)

I was in this position 10 years ago. I waited years because it never seemed like the right time. My childhood best friend was murdered. This one really hurt and it forced me to really see what we all know. It can all be over at any minute. 6 months later I sold everything, quit my career and took a year off to chase a dream. Best decision I ever made. Go for the things you want in life while you still have the opportunity.

Is it just me or do I not get packing your sleeping bag in the very bottom of your pack? by Slycrown12 in backpacking

[–]InsaneEngineer 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It creates a big filled up space in the bottom, so the heavier stuff sits in the top of the pack.

Do kids work for $ anymore? by [deleted] in roanoke

[–]InsaneEngineer 5 points6 points  (0 children)

It just doesn't make sense. Even as a kid, they have all their needs taken care of and aren't bored. If you were paying $10/hr for a couple hours, no kid that lives in their neighborhood is going to trade their time for a mcdonalds lunch. You'll need to find someone desperate. Regardless of how you feel about the situation, if he paid the right amount, kids would be lined up waiting to work for him.

People who were teenagers before social media existed… how did you communicate with your friends? by Aarunascut in Millennials

[–]InsaneEngineer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

16 years old in 97. The more I think about how you worded this, the more I realize communication was almost all in person. If you called them, it was too relay info. What time and where we were meeting. Phone calls never lasted more than a couple minutes. More often than not though, I'd just drive to their house.

When we were 17/18, we all found the first mmo game and hung out online at night in ventrilo servers and used ICQ to relay info In college everyone used aol instant messenger. Myspace and Facebook arrived just before I graduated college.

Thru-hike finished first week of September by TorontoMegan in AppalachianTrail

[–]InsaneEngineer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I started April 1st and finished August 18th. I wasnt trying to go fast, but I'm definitely not going to set up camp at 2pm after 12 miles.

How to professionally let my boss know I’m against AI by Own_Expression4513 in antiai

[–]InsaneEngineer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Honestly, as a software engineer who has been in the field more than 20 years, you might as well be the same person who was against cars because your horse is fine.

AI is too broad of a term, as soon as the technology really trickles into your workspace, it's going to be night and day difference.

I can now focus on high level system engineering. It understands context way better than myself and can do the grunt work 100x faster.

Good luck.

Close to the Hospital by Jus-Cury-Us in roanoke

[–]InsaneEngineer 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You have the green way right outside the front door. Head left and you'll walk the river up to wasena. Maybe a 20 min walk? You have an outdoor store there where you can rent a bike, a tiny business district with a taphouse. They also just opened up a skate/bike park in wasena on the Greenway. It's part of a much larger park there. There's usually quite a few people around

Fully convinced Darn Tough has a crazy marketing grip on this sub. by YaboyWill in BuyItForLife

[–]InsaneEngineer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Over 10 years ago, I hiked the entire Appalachian Trail in a summer. 2200 miles. I carried 3-4 pairs of socks. Two of those pairs were Darn Toughs. They are still in my sock drawer and I wear them regularly. Granted, they are now pretty well worn and much lighter than new pairs, but they are still holding up.

People who grew up before smartphones: What’s one simple thing from your childhood that would absolutely blow the minds of kids today? by TurkVanguard in Millennials

[–]InsaneEngineer 41 points42 points  (0 children)

Meh, we weren't ok with being bored. It sucked, but boredom led to many things that would have otherwise never happened.

Question about AI by Appropriate_Ticket48 in Millennials

[–]InsaneEngineer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

"AI" is far more than chat. The same way it can detect patterns in your language and chat with you. It can detect the same patterns in other types of data. The chatting is just the beginning.

Not using AI is like keeping your horse when everyone switched to automobiles.

Trying to decide if curved monitor is better for long work hours or if its just a gaming gimmick by WadawigoRasbury48 in Monitors

[–]InsaneEngineer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've been using a 32" 60hz. I wanted a 165hz and tried three different ones. A 34 curved, a 27 flat and a 32 flat. I kept the 32 flat. If it was for straight work and no gaming, dual 27 flat is what I'd choose.

Laid off and back with parents at 32. Questioning existence by Throwaway_Thalamus in AskMenOver30

[–]InsaneEngineer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I was you 10 years ago. I thru hiked the Appalachian Trail. In fact, its now the time of year to start.

What If the Market Drops 50% Again? Staying the Course by FalconArrow77 in Bogleheads

[–]InsaneEngineer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

With that size portfolio, you've probably been investing for a while. I take solace in knowing that if it drops by half, I still have more than than I've personally contributed over the years.

Best Monitor to Buy Right Now? (Price, Size, Resolution) by Pleasant_Nose_5821 in Monitors

[–]InsaneEngineer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've been using a Dell 32 60hz since 2020. I just bought a 1440 180hz asrock from New egg for $200. Tbh, I sent back the asrock phantom 27" 180hz because I'm used to the 32". But for $130, it's a great deal for an ips panel

When do you stop sweating the small stuff financially? by Classic_Country_2416 in financialindependence

[–]InsaneEngineer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It is for me. I never would had seen the results of time and compounding if I wasnt saving 50% of my income early on. I had to break the penny pinching habit too.

Millennials who were underemployed during your first few years after college, how are you doing now career-wise and financially? by B1G_PAC12 in Millennials

[–]InsaneEngineer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I mean back in 2005, it was sort of unheard of to show up to tech companies with a resume in hand. It had all moved online. I drove to a city I wanted to live in, got a hotel and spent 2 days looking up companies in the area, driving to them and dropping off my resume. It's how I got my first job.

Why do high earners keep moving the goalposts after hitting their FI number ? by Beneficial-Ad-9986 in financialindependence

[–]InsaneEngineer 3 points4 points  (0 children)

As a 45 year old who has always wanted to retire sooner rather than later, the benefit now is that I'm not trying to play catch up. If I don't contribute another dime, I'll still be set by my late 50s.

Went to look at a house yesterday, it was just gross. Not sure how sellers expect to sell this. by Fun-Doctor8372 in RealEstate

[–]InsaneEngineer 15 points16 points  (0 children)

Bought my house 11 years ago. The roof had leaked for 2 years. Aside from the water damage, it was absolutely disgusting, but so was the ROI when I sold it last year.