@dang this is a very interesting and relevant doc. I think it needs another chance at making it to the front page.
This is a fairly easy to read doc discussing some of the challenges with using AI tooling in a forward thinking and disciplined way. Coming from Thoughtworks it also gives a bit of gravitas and legitimacy.
There's good stuff in here. It would be a shame for the larger HN community to miss out on this conversation.
You're right that this isn't some groundbreaking revelation. If you're using AI enough to be feeling it, you're feeling/seeing what they're talking about. The purpose of a paper/retreat like this it get it all together and written down on paper, then to disseminate it to the wider world. I think the paper does a good job of collecting info that isn't wrong, and which has enough info to help guide folks making decisions.
Mainly because Martin Fowler is part of their C suite
I agree that it's marketing material, but that doesn't instantly make it garbage. I've been reading their quarterly Thoughtworks Radar for a while now and it's clearly put together by people who understand the industry.
Sigh. Nobody is ever going to be happy. Would saying it came from a rando Reddit user be better?
They at least put the effort into having the retreat and putting this together. Would other consultancies (who we know little about) have of done the same?
I think the original title is better than the current one, though: "The future of software engineering – [Thoughtworks] retreat findings and strategic insights"
To me, "Where does engineering go?" is a much more opaque title than "The future of software engineering", the latter of which immediately tells me what this is about.
This is a fairly easy to read doc discussing some of the challenges with using AI tooling in a forward thinking and disciplined way. Coming from Thoughtworks it also gives a bit of gravitas and legitimacy.
There's good stuff in here. It would be a shame for the larger HN community to miss out on this conversation.