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Vibe Coding, for developers who have clear goals and know what they want, is indeed a powerful tool. Quickly finding the rhythm, code coming effortlessly, and efficiency skyrocketing.
But the reality is, not everyone can master this approach. For those who purely want to learn a skill to make a living? Frankly, this trick becomes a bit redundant. Without a solid foundation, relying solely on intuition to write code can easily lead to setbacks.
Looking at the wave of AI sweeping in, the entire game is changing. In the traditional sense, "tech" — those specific programming skills and familiarity with frameworks — is indeed becoming less important. The key now is whether you can harness AI tools and pick out the reliable solutions from a sea of options. What to learn and how to learn it needs to be reconsidered.
The fundamentals still need to be solid; no matter how strong the vibe is, it's useless.
After the arrival of AI, we indeed need to rethink what to learn. Familiarity with frameworks isn't as impressive as it used to be.
It seems that now the real test is how to use AI tools, rather than the skill of coding manually.
However, to be fair, people without a solid foundation can easily fall into traps when using AI, and they still need good judgment.
This wave of change is quite rapid; if you can't keep up with the pace, you'll be eliminated.
Vibe coding is useful for professional developers, but for someone like me who learns while doing, it's not really applicable.
Programming in the AI era is truly a new set of game rules.
Trying to play tricks without a solid foundation, no wonder AI is taking over...
That's right, it's really outdated to stubbornly focus on framework details when learning programming now. The key is to be good at using tools.
Vibe Coding is suitable for already strong individuals; ordinary people should first solidify their basic skills.
With AI coming, skills learned halfway have become devalued, which is ironic.
That's why I say the way to learn programming now needs to change; the era of technique is truly over.
I haven't really seen many people who feel confident about writing code.
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The interesting part is that once AI tools appeared, proficiency in traditional frameworks quickly became obsolete, as rules are rewritten too fast.
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As expected, the final outcome still depends on the eye for selecting schemes rather than typing speed.
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Late-night monitoring of deployment changes in several projects reveals that the iteration speed of development paradigms is so fast that it's hard to keep up.
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It's worth noting that jumping straight into Vibe Coding without a foundation is a suicidal move, as code piles up and waits to crash.
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Based on past experience, only those who know how to wield tools in the AI era can survive. Those who only learn skills have already been half replaced.
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So the key question is, how to filter out reliable schemes from a vast array of options? This is the new skill barrier.
Without a solid foundation, rushing forward will eventually catch up with us.
Now that AI is so powerful, we need to learn how to use tools instead of being used by tools.
This wave of AI has indeed changed the rules. Now the competition is more about how to use tools rather than writing a few algorithms by hand. It feels like traditional problem-solving is a bit outdated.
Speaking of which, if you have no foundation and still want to rely on intuition to make a living? You must be very confident, haha.
I've been long on AI since this wave started. The real money isn't in learning to code; it's in mastering the tools to select strategies. Just like trading cryptocurrencies back in the day—those who could read K-line charts are gone; only those who understand on-chain data are still alive.
Basics? Yes, but now it has to be a new foundation. Not knowing how to use AI has become a state of naked shorting.
Honestly, those guys still obsessing over mastering frameworks are gradually being marginalized. I've seen too many.
Rules are changing, and annualized returns are the real king. Whoever can iterate faster wins.