No doubt, but the tech firms in India that are bidding on outsourced software projects all have a toxic incentive to produce code very quickly and very cheaply. In an environment like that, I’m sure the pressure to use AI is extremely high.
I agree, but In my experience tech companies are willing to stretch the definition of “acceptable” far beyond what’s responsible if it gives them a temporary boost on this quarter’s earnings report. Is it sustainable? No. But corp-think has never held sustainability as a virtue.
Idk, impoverished with access to education is quite a mix for hardworking individuals.
No doubt, but the tech firms in India that are bidding on outsourced software projects all have a toxic incentive to produce code very quickly and very cheaply. In an environment like that, I’m sure the pressure to use AI is extremely high.
That assumes the AI can produce acceptable code quickly, which I think is not likely.
I agree, but In my experience tech companies are willing to stretch the definition of “acceptable” far beyond what’s responsible if it gives them a temporary boost on this quarter’s earnings report. Is it sustainable? No. But corp-think has never held sustainability as a virtue.
A cubicle farm in India has no such incentive as a large tech company, they have to push out code quickly as you said.