Owen Barnes

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Owen Barnes

Owen Barnes

@temporalwave

Conscious AI consulting. Author of @ygtbf_book. Building @polydotsite

เข้าร่วม Kasım 2010
3.9K กำลังติดตาม1.2K ผู้ติดตาม
Owen Barnes
Owen Barnes@temporalwave·
So I plucked up the courage to post my new audiobook about AI anxiety (@ygtbf_book) to Reddit and got... Nine negative anti-AI comments in the first eight hours reddit.com/r/audiobooks/c… Only a few people actually listened (I counted the visits). Most instantly dismissed it, probably thinking the entire book was AI generated. (It's not!) To say that we're living in an AI/Claude Code/agents/OpenClaw bubble on X is an understatement There are some very anxious, scared people out there who have a guttural hatred towards anything "AI" on principle. It's why I made the book in the first place! I'm not sure what the solution is, but their fears are real. Some are well-founded and need to be taken seriously All of us working in technology need to shoehorn AI into products a lot less and listen a lot more
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Owen Barnes
Owen Barnes@temporalwave·
@vatsal_sanghvi I resonate with this deeply. So good to see it articulated so well. Founding something new is a lonely path. The novelty of working from home soon wears off
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Paul Graham
Paul Graham@paulg·
Prediction: In the AI age, taste will become even more important. When anyone can make anything, the big differentiator is what you choose to make. paulgraham.com/taste.html
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Owen Barnes
Owen Barnes@temporalwave·
@IM_Kevin_Archer Agree. There’s such a gap between single-user fitness tracker app and a multi-user app handling payments
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Owen Barnes
Owen Barnes@temporalwave·
@waynesutton Exactly! People are going to crave messy|unpredictable|risky human interactions more than ever. I speak a lot about this in @ygtbf_book
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Wayne Sutton
Wayne Sutton@waynesutton·
Counterintuitive effect of the agent economy: as AI handles more interactions, human-to-human experiences become the scarce resource. And scarce resources get repriced. The companies and people who create authentic human moments will build the brands no agent can replicate.
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Owen Barnes
Owen Barnes@temporalwave·
@vasuman Somebody will always need to be responsible for security and maintenance. Large companies don’t want to deal with that. I mention this in @ygtbf_book
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vas
vas@vasuman·
The 'SaaS is dead' position is stupid. Many SaaS platforms stand to benefit from AI, not be destroyed by it. There are many that will die but most that pivot hard to promoting agent use will thrive. At Varick we have very strong opinions about which platform falls into which category.
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Owen Barnes
Owen Barnes@temporalwave·
@arthur0x Employers also need to think beyond full time jobs. Results matter, not time spent. I speak about this more in @ygtbf_book
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Arthur
Arthur@arthur0x·
I think the world will increasingly not tolerate bullshit jobs/task especially those bureaucratic unneccesary admin stuff given that AI can solve all these things easily.
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Owen Barnes
Owen Barnes@temporalwave·
@_adityaa21 Agreed. But we also have the power to make things and put them in the hands of millions of people. That's magic! (Btw I talk about dealing with the loss of identity in YouAreGoingToBeFine.com)
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Aditya
Aditya@_adityaa21·
Cons of being a software engineer no one really talks about 👇 Everyone sees the salaries, WFH perks, and fancy titles. Here’s the other side: • Your learning never ends If you stop learning for even 6–12 months, you start falling behind. Tech doesn’t wait. • Mental fatigue is real Staring at screens, debugging for hours, context switching—your brain gets tired before your body. • You’re judged by output, not effort 10 hours of hard thinking can look like “nothing” if the feature didn’t ship. • Imposter syndrome never fully goes away New stack, new company, smarter peers → constant self-doubt. • Deadlines don’t care about bugs Management promises dates. Engineers deal with reality. • Work-life balance depends on the team, not the role One bad manager can ruin a “dream job”. • Rejections hit differently You can be good and still fail interviews because of luck, timing, or niche questions. • Side projects feel mandatory To grow or switch jobs, your free time often becomes “resume time”. • AI pressure is increasing You’re expected to be faster, smarter, and more productive—constantly. • Your worth can feel tied to your skills When code breaks, confidence breaks with it. Still a great career. Just not the “easy money” path social media sells. If you’re choosing this field—choose it with eyes open.
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Owen Barnes
Owen Barnes@temporalwave·
@IMAO_ AI can always add, but everything it adds must be maintained forevermore. By you! The skill is knowing what NOT to add. What to take away. I talk about this in YouAreGoingToBeFine.com
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Frank J. Fleming
Frank J. Fleming@IMAO_·
Yes, the skill I have that is a combination of my high IQ and decades of experience is now an API call that costs pocket change.
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Owen Barnes
Owen Barnes@temporalwave·
@adityaag Our job was never to write code. It was to build products people want! Ones that solve real human problems. I talk about dealing with loss of identity, especially for software developers, in @ygtbf_book
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Aditya Agarwal
Aditya Agarwal@adityaag·
Don't be sad. Dominate. Something I wrote earlier this week went viral and got shared pretty widely. x.com/adityaag/statu… There is no doubt that I felt nostalgic and sad after seeing the sheer power of Claude Code. But I have produced more code in the last 5 days than I have in the last 5 years. If you are an software engineer, you have a choice between learning how to use these tools that can give you god-like powers or you can become obsolete. I strongly believe every engineer who has ever written code is capable of the former. But the choice is yours and yours alone.
Aditya Agarwal@adityaag

It's a weird time. I am filled with wonder and also a profound sadness. I spent a lot of time over the weekend writing code with Claude. And it was very clear that we will never ever write code by hand again. It doesn't make any sense to do so. Something I was very good at is now free and abundant. I am happy...but disoriented. At the same time, something I spent my early career building (social networks) was being created by lobster-agents. It's all a bit silly...but if you zoom out, it's kind of indistinguishable from humans on the larger internet. So both the form and function of my early career are now produced by AI. I am happy but also sad and confused. If anything, this whole period is showing me what it is like to be human again.

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Owen Barnes
Owen Barnes@temporalwave·
@housecor Everyone is feeing the same. Especially software developers as it’s hitting us first. I have written a section specifically about this in YouAreGoingToBeFine.com
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Cory House
Cory House@housecor·
Over the last year I’ve gone through the 5 stages of grief. 1. Denial - “AI writes slop.” 2. Anger - “AI is trained on stolen data. I worked 20 years for these skills.” 3. Bargaining - “If I ignore it, maybe it will pass.” 4. Depression - “I don’t feel like working.” 5. Acceptance - “AI makes me quicker, more creative, and more capable. It automates the drudgery so I can focus on key decisions instead of syntax.” Relieved to be at step 5.
Tom Dale@tomdale

I don't know why this week became the tipping point, but nearly every software engineer I've talked to is experiencing some degree of mental health crisis.

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Owen Barnes
Owen Barnes@temporalwave·
@HxrshitYadav Keep learning! Vibe coding is great, but if you're going to ship anything significant, you need to be able to understand the code when things go wrong. I talk about this in YouAreGoingToBeFine.com
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Harshit Yadav
Harshit Yadav@HxrshitYadav·
Every morning, I wake up and check if AI has replaced my future job yet. Not joking. > LinkedIn is full of 'AI will replace developers.' > X is full of 'Learn AI or die.' > YouTube is full of 'Software engineering is dead.' Meanwhile I'm in final year still learning arrays. Am I preparing for a job that won't exist? Genuine question. Not being dramatic. How are you dealing with this fear?
Harshit Yadav tweet media
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