Ask HN: Is anyone seriously considering a career change?
18
zzeven7 about 4 hours ago 9 comments
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There may still be engineering jobs today, but I honestly wonder how long that can last and how long they'll still pay well. I'm in the middle of looking for my next engineering role but also wondering if I should be going back to school in my 40s instead.

Discussion (9 Comments)Read Original on HackerNews
With AI, every engineer will need to become a manager to manager one or more AI assistants who do a lot of the work. The good news is that this will not involve dealing with performance reviews, psychological problems, and raises. You will also remain close to the code.
Look at the manager role again, and see which parts of it will be needed to manage AI agents. Learn those parts from standard management books. You will kind of pivot, but still remain close to the code.
On the other hand, if all you enjoyed is typing in code, but hated working with product people to understand the intent, doing code reviews, or building software that is easy to QA, there will be fewer and fewer such jobs.
Communication is key, and it always has been.
I'm moving more to management after 13 years of IC work and being lead for the last year. We are all in on AI for everything at my company, and that's not just lip service.
There will always be a demand for licensed Professional Engineers, the folks who can sign on the dotted line certifying something won't collapse and kill someone.
I'm 43 and I've been thinking I might just retire if I get laid off and can't find something new. I'm frugal and have enough saved up that I could make it work if I leave my high cost of living area.
I'm not worried about engineering jobs being eliminated. I'm more worried that companies are going to expect insane velocity because of these tools and I'm not going to be able to keep up in part because I care about quality. At my company, the people that use AI to generate the most code seem to get the most recognition.
Well... my timescale is 20 years. Many people reading this now are older than I will be in 20 years. So how will things look in 2046?
Can't say, but I find it worth thinking about.
To me it seems like the sentiment has already shifted among developers on what the scope of change we'll see with AI will be. It seems like at any point in time there's a lot of skepticism that it will ever be able to get over whatever the current big limitation right now is. But when thinking of careers they don't play out over 5 years or even 10 but 20 30 or more years.
If you are concerned about employability then I think going back to school or investing in a masters or some technical courses could be interesting. Or even moving to coordination/leader/engineer roles?
But if you have a hobby, maybe you could consider trying something different like either doing it in parallel, or maybe combining with engineering. e.g. I'm considering something like Blender3D + drawing using Grease pencil. Blender can be programmed with Python too, and this way I'd combine two things that I like.
I started off as a javacript developer. Then I was a full stack SWE. Then I was an Applied AI Engineer. I think enterprises will have a need for folks with technical expertise to deliver value - often new software - for a long time.
Until an enterprise like capital one can operate without anyone in the organization knowing how any of their technical infrastructure works (never?) I expect I'll be able to find work.
In fact, during the push for workers of other jobs to get closer to dev, through vibe coding for example, it may be realized that there are workers who aren't good at their jobs and it's dev that's been filling in the gaps all along.