Marcin Rodziewicz

988 posts

Marcin Rodziewicz banner
Marcin Rodziewicz

Marcin Rodziewicz

@codingcrisis

"It may look like a crisis, but it’s only the end of an illusion." | IT manager by day, coder by night | loves Coca Cola

Gdynia, Poland Katılım Haziran 2022
296 Takip Edilen75 Takipçiler
Marcin Rodziewicz retweetledi
PureRinFunction
PureRinFunction@PureRinFunction·
Unfathomably based.
PureRinFunction tweet media
English
108
1.9K
13.5K
186.7K
Marcin Rodziewicz retweetledi
TheStandupPod
TheStandupPod@thestanduppod·
Notepad Exploit Explained
English
41
126
1.7K
127.6K
Marcin Rodziewicz
Marcin Rodziewicz@codingcrisis·
@kettanaito @housecor Do you have actual experience with the practice? I used it with a team and it was great. Failing fast, fixing fast, less context switching, less time in reviews. Actually felt like working on the product and not some disconnect parts. Listen to @davefarley77 and give it a chance.
English
0
0
0
20
Artem Zakharchenko
Artem Zakharchenko@kettanaito·
@housecor This is such a bad practice. I am yet to see a single team that would look at the things they pushed to the backlog. I am of the philosophy that if core reviews are an obstacle for your team, you aren't doing pull requests right.
English
7
1
71
5.6K
Cory House
Cory House@housecor·
Just learned a team at Microsoft is doing code reviews *after* merge. Why? To move faster. No more pausing work to wait for code reviews. No need for stacked PRs. No more time-consuming merge conflicts caused by long code review delays. This has risks, but may work well for a team that is: - mature - high trust - has strong automated quality checks
English
165
11
282
94.2K
⭕ Brock Pierson
⭕ Brock Pierson@brockpierson·
Be honest. You used it... DIDNT YOU
⭕ Brock Pierson tweet media
English
1.6K
106
2.8K
129.4K
Marcin Rodziewicz
Marcin Rodziewicz@codingcrisis·
@DorianDevelops I want one. I even bought a Surface Laptop, but the touch on Windows is so atrocious I spotted using it.
English
0
0
0
42
Marcin Rodziewicz
Marcin Rodziewicz@codingcrisis·
@Cartidise I kinda preferred how it felt to plug the lightning cable into my iPhone. There was this tactile sensation, not a click but still a noticeable feeling of sealing a connection. It’s not present with any of my usb-c devices and cables.
English
0
0
0
519
Noah Cat
Noah Cat@Cartidise·
We don’t thank the EU enough for getting rid of Lightning and micro USB
Noah Cat tweet media
English
597
2.1K
82.9K
3.6M
Marcin Rodziewicz
Marcin Rodziewicz@codingcrisis·
@bcherny How does Spotify need 50 new features? How working out of your work schedule is a good thing? How is a phone a good programming interface not negatively affecting your health. This is pure BS!
English
0
0
19
515
Boris Cherny
Boris Cherny@bcherny·
Love seeing how Spotify is shipping with Claude Code. Their best developers haven't written a single line of code since December, they fix bugs from their phones, and they shipped 50+ features from Slack during morning commutes techcrunch.com/2026/02/12/spo…
English
291
301
4.5K
723.1K
CoolRick
CoolRick@ImCoolRick·
@code_star My company manufacturers $60M worth of products per year. We wrote software to manage our factory and automate processes. Opus 4.6 has sped up our developers by 8X ish. Saving us $6M per year in engineering costs. Claude is one shorting basically everything I ask.
English
5
0
2
1.4K
Cody Blakeney
Cody Blakeney@code_star·
"They don’t touch syntax. They don’t debug loops. Models generate flawless code. Humans curate, validate, direct. The job isn’t building anymore. It’s conducting." Must be some other model they are using, cus I know its not Opus 4.6
Dustin@r0ck3t23

Dario Amodei just announced the death date of your profession. At Davos, Anthropic’s CEO said coding as a human skill has 6 to 12 months left. Not as hyperbole. As timeline. Amodei: “We might be 6 to 12 months away.” Not prediction. Observation. His engineers already quit writing code. Amodei: “I have engineers within Anthropic who say: ‘I don’t write any code anymore.’” They don’t touch syntax. They don’t debug loops. Models generate flawless code. Humans curate, validate, direct. The job isn’t building anymore. It’s conducting. The transformation happened silently. While bootcamps taught React, the actual profession mutated into something unrecognizable. Still typing functions manually? You’re not being diligent. You’re already obsolete and haven’t realized it. Amodei: “We would make models that were good at coding and use that to produce the next generation of model.” The loop closes. AI writes the code that births superior AI. Recursion without human dependency. Once sealed, progress stops being gated by people. Only by semiconductors. One year. Requirements to production, fully autonomous. Humans set strategy. Machines execute perfectly, instantly, infinitely. Syntax is dead. Only intent remains. You don’t build software now. You conceive it with precision, and intelligence manifests it before you finish the thought. The skill isn’t coding anymore. It’s knowing what to demand in the three seconds before the system delivers something you could never have built yourself. Your profession didn’t evolve. It evaporated. And the people still learning to code are training for jobs that won’t exist when they graduate.

English
31
7
465
45.8K
Marcin Rodziewicz
Marcin Rodziewicz@codingcrisis·
@lzsthw Wow, you've worked in some toxic environments. Or just trying to be overly dramatic.
English
0
0
0
12
Chad Promptwright
Chad Promptwright@SirPromptwright·
"Bro just use Cursor you don't need to actually learn how to code"
Chad Promptwright tweet media
English
46
71
1.7K
82.2K
Marcin Rodziewicz
Marcin Rodziewicz@codingcrisis·
@karthikponna19 You most likely wanted to say "a single IDE worse than VS Code" - that's a more tricky task.
English
0
0
0
237
Karthik
Karthik@karthikponna19·
can you name a single IDE better than VS Code ?
Karthik tweet media
English
674
123
2.7K
226.2K
Simplifying AI
Simplifying AI@simplifyinAI·
Former Harvard CS Professor: "AI is improving exponentially and will replace most human programmers within 4-15 years:
English
49
55
420
38.3K
Marcin Rodziewicz
Marcin Rodziewicz@codingcrisis·
@vitrupo He knows he’s getting under and selling it as hard as possible.
English
2
0
11
1.6K
vitrupo
vitrupo@vitrupo·
Sam Altman: “By the end of this year, for $100–$1,000 of inference and a good idea, you’ll be able to create software that would have taken teams of people a year to do. That magnitude of economic change is very hard to wrap your head around.”
English
354
322
3.4K
578.9K
Marcin Rodziewicz
Marcin Rodziewicz@codingcrisis·
@AtrakcyjnyAdam Idą zmiany, to fakt. Zwróć tylko uwagę, że LLMy mają pętlę zwrotną - korzystają z wiedzy i doświadczenia ich użytkowników. To jest skuteczniejsze niż „akceptacja odpowiedzi” na stacku. Problemem może być brak dostępu do tej wiedzy z innego poziomu niż modele AI.
Polski
0
0
0
25
Adam
Adam@AtrakcyjnyAdam·
To, mili państwo, niestety będzie koniec ery open source'u jaki znaliśmy do tej pory. Forów, na których obcy ludzie pomagają sobie nawzajem, bo tak. Zostało to zreprywatyzowane i prędzej czy później to się skończy średnio. Tak samo jak to, że nie zatrudnia się teraz młodych programistów wcale.
Pedro Domingos@pmddomingos

RIP Stack Overflow.

Polski
91
19
680
95.2K
Tomasz Kus
Tomasz Kus@TomaszKus7·
@AtrakcyjnyAdam Ja czekam jak to wszystko ładnie walnie. Nie chcą juniorów? Super do czasu aż midzi i seniorzy zaczną po prostu odchodzić w niebyt, a nowych nie będzie. Bo z kogo mieli się wykształcić, skoro juniorów nie chce nikt? ;)
Polski
3
0
0
497
Nick Chapsas
Nick Chapsas@nickchapsas·
Every day I wake up and pray that nobody buys Anthropic
English
16
3
88
15.7K
Marcin Rodziewicz
Marcin Rodziewicz@codingcrisis·
Unlikely. China does not rely on the states as much as you’d think. Internal consumption and regional connections are their main strengths, it’s no longer a cheap labor third country. They are a regional superpower and the US seems to be stepping down from world hegemony to a regional superpower as well. A duopoly is more likely.
English
0
0
0
8
Colonel Dragasès
Colonel Dragasès@KrevinSac·
@SenseReceptor And then Russia and the USA will normalize relations, develop the arctic together, and isolate China until the CCP collapses - which is already well into the process both economically and demographically. In this scenario, China's demise is merely a matter of time and decoupling.
English
1
0
0
114
Sense Receptor
Sense Receptor@SenseReceptor·
Catherine Austin Fitts: "The strategy [now] is we're going to divide up the world... China... is going to oversee Asia... [the U.S. wants] Greenland, part of Canada... the Panama Canal...[and] Latin America... basically we've got an administration that looks at the whole globe as a real estate development." This clip of Fitts, a former Assistant Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, investment banker, and founder of the Solari Report (@solari_the), is taken from a discussion with Mel K (@MelKShow) posted to Rumble on January 10, 2026. ----------------Partial transcription of clip--------------- "I think what you're watching, the US Strategy was to implode Russia and use the Russian resources to maintain hegemony against China. That strategy failed. That was the neocon strategy. So now the strategy is we're going to divide up the world. "China and Russia are going to— Well, China really is going to oversee Asia. So you notice China is having big military drills that are very invasive on Taiwan. And. And the US Is quiet. And meantime, the US is basically saying, we want Greenland, part of Canada, we want the Panama Canal, we want Venezuela, we want Latin America. "And so you're seeing, instead of going East- West, you're seeing the US Back off being the global superpower and become the regional superpower, but assert control. Because Venezuela, more than anything, is about kicking the Chinese and Russians out and asserting supremacy there. And there are many ways it can go down, but the Chinese are remarkably quiet about it, just like we're remarkably quiet about Taiwan. "So here's the question. You've had Witkoff and Kushner over in Moscow. And so the question is, you get the Ukraine and we get Venezuela and Cuba, and you're quiet about it. "I think, you know, basically we've got an administration that looks at the whole globe as a real estate development. And, you know, Gaza's a real estate development, Ukraine's a real estate development. And they're just, you know, think of this as sort of global 1031 exchanges going on among the great superpowers."
English
31
260
598
48.3K
Marcin Rodziewicz
Marcin Rodziewicz@codingcrisis·
@blackrose2266 @SenseReceptor Russia is to weak for Europe it barely holds a third of Ukraine. The US is however playing on making Europe weaker (so is China unfortunately). This is very sad, as we used to be great allies. Only confrontation with China counts for the US now.
English
0
0
1
17
Dave
Dave@GamewithDave·
Play a single video game for a year 12 hours a day to get $10M. What game are you playing?
English
11.2K
348
24.1K
5.2M