Every time I saw things like this makes me fell amazing that IT developers are willing to collectively develop a tool eventually replace majority of them..... and then us. Good job.
@@marek19922209 Did you not see how AI did your entire job with the push of a button? Do you really think you will still be paid to push that button in 2-3 years? 😂
Well put, its so fucked.lol My only hope is that its oversold as being more capable than it appears in the demo, which isn't far fetched when it comes to tech demo's.
Imagine the potential keynotes for the next few years: 2024: No need to code, just tweak what AI generates. 2025: No need to tweak, simply ensure everything runs smoothly. 2026: No need to intervene, just be there to pay for the service. 2027: You... 💀 2028: ... Hearing about these changes, which frame developers' once-creative tasks as repetitive ones, I have to ponder. Today, we applaud as these tasks are automated. But what if, in a year or three, the entirety of coding - planning, design, testing, and all other tasks we believe require a human touch - becomes automated too? Will we keep applauding? Every year, we fine-tune our current models with data from interactions between human users and tasks that AI hasn’t mastered yet. Then, in a year or two, with enough data, we roll out a new model that can take over. It's as simple as drafting a PR message, sifting through issues, tweaking code, running tests, fixing bugs, and deploying-all without any human involvement. Surely, in a few years, an entrepreneur will be able to transform an idea into a fully operational app using tools like Copilot. The number of Github Copilot users won't just be in the millions; it'll hit a billion if things go as Satya Nadella envisions. And there’ll be applause all around! The writing's on the wall: we're approaching a future where software engineers, developers, and designers, as we know them today, may become obsolete. I'm not knocking the trend - as an entrepreneur, I see the benefits. But isn’t it ironic? Programmers cheer when they're told, "You don't need to do this or that anymore," not realizing that eventually, it might turn into, "We don't need you at all." And to be honest, I even used the ChatGPT to improve this comment grammatically!
these theories has been done and proven already, most of the manual labor these days have been replaced with automation. you sound like those hill billie guys from south park always saying "thEY tOoK mE JoB"
@@Xenon-h9z For generations, individuals manually cut logs using a traditional hand saw. However, the landscape changed when we introduced automation to the process, revolutionizing the way we approach woodcutting.
@@NeilStuddYa, but extend that into the future a bit further, and now we have 10 testers, and if there's an issue, and the AI can't fix it, _no one_ can, because no one understands how the code works.
"Huge win for engineers" by replacing the engineering with "tell the AI what to do". They're trying to turn software engineering into no more than a data entry job.
@@KaedysKornah There will be managers that try to reduce down to those levels (as they should for any effective function), but these tools are built to accelerate the value through the full dev pipeline, and remove the drudgery of a lot of low level tool-specific voodoo we have to do today. Even after all this is perfect, you need to know what you’re trying to solve with the tools (all of em) available to you as a developer. A good contractor or artisan needs to keep an eye on maturing tools just as much as their craft. At some point focusing on the minutia and not the actual work and value is just being a hipster developer. “Look at all this stuff I setup for the perfect espresso” :) mkay but there are coffee shops too, but cool.
@@c016smith52 You're analogy of a coffee shop is more astute than you may realize. Another would be woodworking. We can successfully mass-produce coffee, just as we can wooden furniture, and yet any connoisseur of coffee, or woodwork, will sharply contest the suggestion that the mass-produced versions are of equivalent quality. And yet, the tradecrafts of hand woodworking, and hand-made drinks, and all sorts of handmade crafts, are largely a dying art. There's unquestionably a _quality_ advantage to that handcrafting, but the _cost savings_ of the mass-produced stuff means that by-in-large, we're stuck with the inferior, if efficiently-produced, mass produced version. I fear that's exactly where software engineering is going. To an extent, it's already been moving down that road, but the introduction of powerful AIs that can largely negate any need for carefully cultivated engineering skill is going to turn what is currently an area of high skill and at times arguably artistic talent into, well, factory mass-production lines of low-skilled labor. And the result will certainly be cost-effective, but it'll also be noticeably inferior, though it will probably remain at least _serviceable._ Yet another skilled trade sacrificed on the alter of mass production.
Ze German developers ;). Early adopter here, it’s been certainly interesting. Good at easy things, deceivingly bad at complex things. But I’m all cases it prevents a writer’s block. Hell, I even enjoy writing documentation with copilot as my partner
it makes you wonder: is writing documentation even needed in the future? If you use copilot to write documentation, then any other engineer could use copilot to write similar documentation aka to understand undocumented code.
Tabnine early adopter here. Co-pilot is pitched as the leading bot pair programmer. That will change very quickly once developers realise they can choose from a range of platform agnostic AI coding assistants. Subscription pricing tiers start low and then the classic corporate enterprise tiers get introduced. Once you can't code without it, you're dependent on the bot.
İ mean thank you for highlighting it. However that doesn't diminish a bit on how great and how exciting the news are. What you say is true, however the world is not a snapshot and this iteration of the software is not sealed in stone. the system was, is, and will be, improving over time. what is true today might not be true tomorrow, and that is the key message! This is dope! is not perfect and doesn't need to be, as is a tool to speed up work, not the producer of final writen in stone, stagnant, untouchable code. And this tool is for adult, intelligent and ground in logic humans, not for brand new untrained people.
@@IntentStore yea agreed, on stage like that if anything goes wrong it's hard to improvise. but just pointing out the AI tech (which was being demo'd) was just fine
12:47 Its so good that she had to abandon Copilots instructions and use the premade demo code :P Well this has been my experience with copilot since day one. Its either getting dumber or my projects get to complicated for it. Anyways, i think copilot needs to be able to track a bigger picture of the project and get better at understanding the objective from that.
If she did a /fix on this, they'd have a massive gain in terms of public perception, as it would be apparent that they are equally as confident with their tools as their are with prepared demo code.
The coming technology is pretty exciting, and will definitely improve our lives in many ways. There is still a lot of hype that is not yet warranted, but probably will be in the long term. As others have mentioned, we need to be cautious since no technology is perfect, nor are humans and the interface is going to be rough at times. Speaking of imperfect technology, what is going on with all of the video artifacts in this recording? 😅
Brudda ion even know how to code gud. I proper feel like a caveman being told how fire works. Well, future is bright so I guess it's exciting having all these fun tools to learn and play with.
Not to be a doomer, but I couldn’t help but be reminded of that one love death and robots episode about the swarm when Satya Nadelle started talking about getting copilot in the hands of billions of people. If you missed the episode, the lesson was that when it comes to the longevity of a community/species, high individual intelligence may not be the best survival adaptation
Lol. The layoffs weren’t just developers, it was different fields too. Layoffs happened due to over hiring , not because chatgbt 3.5 was made public XD
@@dscsd9198 are you slow? where did I say anything about chatgpt and how does that invalidate what I said? You're just reafirming what I said, that there is no developer shortage. Oh, and lol
You obviously associated layoffs with programmers, to which I replied that other roles were also affected by hyper hiring, rather than what most people state, AI Chatgbt lol You dumb, go ask chatgbt how to reply to my comment XD
😂 all developers here don’t want to say it but they know it in their heart. This presentation shows that companies will be able to grow with 0.1 percent of their engineers. Only very high level positions and research scientists are going to have jobs. This is inevitable
Imagine if governments used GitHub to manage their legal frameworks so that they were all open source and we could see all the pull requests and all the issues. They could use natural language and all of the amazing productivity tools that software developers use to accelerate the development of systems that make society better
what about the code that can't be described in natural language any shorter than writing the whole step by step when writing the code directly is shorter to write and read, why don't we do the same for mathematics and just express all mathematics in natural language what about not writing boilerplate but abstracting it into library
12:00 This is why new software is slow. People just don't think or optimize. DO NOT SORT if you only need the minimum and/or maximum element !!! You are unnecessarily using a O(n log(n)) when you only need O(n). The problem is not that programmers will be replaced by AI, but if they don't hire good developers who know not just how things can be bone, but if they should be.
i can't wait until this is the level of gpt 4.5, this is cool, but I like saying hey build me this function add that function and having it work without knowing any coding. this is one line at a time, I could print that out with one prompt in gpt...
Ha, that comment reads like software engineering is getting into adult hood 😂 Nobody is forcing you to buy the market leading product. It enforces what‘s market leading. “Now I need to pay to do my job”: All industry professionals like Creatives (Adobe), Architects (AutoDesk), Mechanical Engineers (Solid Works), Tax Accountants (QuickBooks/SAP/Xero/Datev), Laywers, Doctors, Retailers, …… want to send congratulations on growing up. Just shows how immature this industry still is - not even understanding where one is in the value chain.
@@dinoscheidt Sure, like creative people loves to pay big tech companies like Adobe to be able to do their job, that's completely false, they usually are the most against it even tho they use it daily or seek free/open source alternatives or resort to other measures. I mean if Im working for a company that are paying the licences its fine and its great, but this definitively kills the freelance spirit of doing stuff not for profit but for the sake of it. I hope at least this "new revolution techonoly" is given to all the open source maintainers out there working for free
@@ChatGTA345 That's great expectations, the thing is not all developers have the connections, resources or knowledge to do that, specially new ones. Let's hope businesses don't screw us so much and actually good business with good developer experience and career building start growing
What real work sir. This is not going to completely replace tech jobs. Only 1% of tech jobs are going to remain. High level research scientists and system designers and 1 software engineer to make clicks for generation and supervision. Nothing else
I like the progress in this area and the new features, but I'm lost in all those products and brands. Why can't we just know that Copilot now can do X Y and Z, so focusing on single "agent", and not on the exploding amount of different names which i bet no 9ne will ever remember.
Wait, CEO barfs code on team and then makes the code reviewer write the tests? Yup, C suited confirmed. Also "Explain this code" needing a billion dollar tool to deal with the fact the code is illegible? I'm getting grumpier by the minute. I really like the partner program stuff though. Will save a lot of time vs logging into dashboards of 100 tools.
github workspace is gonna accelerate OS projects like crazy. But it looks like its gonna take away the collaboration since AI can just keep building. Gonna be lonely
I'm Thomas and I'm a developer
I'm developer and I'm a Thomas
I am a developer, I am not Thomas.
Hi, Thomas
Thank you Thomas, Everyone is a developer
My name is Thomas the developer, and everybody calls me, the developer.
Every time I saw things like this makes me fell amazing that IT developers are willing to collectively develop a tool eventually replace majority of them..... and then us. Good job.
This is gotta be the coolest intro to a keynote ever. Outstanding animation and music production!
Nothing will ever top windows 95 release
probably generated by AI
You must not be familiar with Webflow
This is like watching a Hoolie talk
🤣🤣🤣🤣
Lol the first 15 seconds I'm already thinking this. Incredible how they got this shit right
you guys are knocking it out of the park, good work! glad to be a part of the github community
GitHub Workspace is the beginning of the end of software development. I love it.
why
@@marek19922209 Did you not see how AI did your entire job with the push of a button?
Do you really think you will still be paid to push that button in 2-3 years? 😂
@@marek19922209Because 90% of developers will lose their jobs.... and some people just want to watch the world burn. 🤷
Eventually. At least for a little while though it will make our lives easier. I use Copilot all the time.
ChatGPT was, but why would you love this unless you're an employer and a sociopath?
A heartfelt thank you for making coding accessible to everyone. Your videos are a treasure trove of valuable information!
the crowds reaction is so ironic it feels like horses applauding for automobiles at a year 1880 science fair😅
Well put, its so fucked.lol My only hope is that its oversold as being more capable than it appears in the demo, which isn't far fetched when it comes to tech demo's.
"I always like to say Please to the AI because you just never know" oop, you said the quiet part out loud 💀
Imagine the potential keynotes for the next few years:
2024: No need to code, just tweak what AI generates.
2025: No need to tweak, simply ensure everything runs smoothly.
2026: No need to intervene, just be there to pay for the service.
2027: You... 💀
2028: ...
Hearing about these changes, which frame developers' once-creative tasks as repetitive ones, I have to ponder. Today, we applaud as these tasks are automated. But what if, in a year or three, the entirety of coding - planning, design, testing, and all other tasks we believe require a human touch - becomes automated too? Will we keep applauding?
Every year, we fine-tune our current models with data from interactions between human users and tasks that AI hasn’t mastered yet. Then, in a year or two, with enough data, we roll out a new model that can take over. It's as simple as drafting a PR message, sifting through issues, tweaking code, running tests, fixing bugs, and deploying-all without any human involvement. Surely, in a few years, an entrepreneur will be able to transform an idea into a fully operational app using tools like Copilot. The number of Github Copilot users won't just be in the millions; it'll hit a billion if things go as Satya Nadella envisions. And there’ll be applause all around!
The writing's on the wall: we're approaching a future where software engineers, developers, and designers, as we know them today, may become obsolete.
I'm not knocking the trend - as an entrepreneur, I see the benefits. But isn’t it ironic? Programmers cheer when they're told, "You don't need to do this or that anymore," not realizing that eventually, it might turn into, "We don't need you at all."
And to be honest, I even used the ChatGPT to improve this comment grammatically!
😂😂 Simply be forthright and admit that this comment was crafted by AI... 😅
these theories has been done and proven already, most of the manual labor these days have been replaced with automation.
you sound like those hill billie guys from south park always saying "thEY tOoK mE JoB"
Yeah I have no idea why anyone working as a SWE is cheering for this.
@@damonfedorick A.) *What* theories, and B.) What do you do that you think it can't and won't be automated? You won't have a job soon either, genius.
@@Xenon-h9z For generations, individuals manually cut logs using a traditional hand saw. However, the landscape changed when we introduced automation to the process, revolutionizing the way we approach woodcutting.
Two developers will soon cover the project where previously ten were working
And four testers where they used to only need one.
@@NeilStuddYa, but extend that into the future a bit further, and now we have 10 testers, and if there's an issue, and the AI can't fix it, _no one_ can, because no one understands how the code works.
You dumb? Ever heard of diminishing returns? Hardly a leap from gbt 3 to 4 xd
@@NeilStudd Overall that still costs less for an employer, the only factor that could matter more is how much time it would take to get non buggy code
😂😂 this presentation is the only thing developers need to know. Companies like google will be able to grow with 1% of engineers.
This is amazing. Co-pilot was already good but in combination this is a huge win for all engineers
Hope they don't make us engineers useless in 5 years lmao
"Huge win for engineers" by replacing the engineering with "tell the AI what to do". They're trying to turn software engineering into no more than a data entry job.
@@footballuniverse6522 I don't see how that doesn't happen tbqh
@@KaedysKornah
There will be managers that try to reduce down to those levels (as they should for any effective function), but these tools are built to accelerate the value through the full dev pipeline, and remove the drudgery of a lot of low level tool-specific voodoo we have to do today.
Even after all this is perfect, you need to know what you’re trying to solve with the tools (all of em) available to you as a developer.
A good contractor or artisan needs to keep an eye on maturing tools just as much as their craft. At some point focusing on the minutia and not the actual work and value is just being a hipster developer. “Look at all this stuff I setup for the perfect espresso” :) mkay but there are coffee shops too, but cool.
@@c016smith52 You're analogy of a coffee shop is more astute than you may realize. Another would be woodworking. We can successfully mass-produce coffee, just as we can wooden furniture, and yet any connoisseur of coffee, or woodwork, will sharply contest the suggestion that the mass-produced versions are of equivalent quality. And yet, the tradecrafts of hand woodworking, and hand-made drinks, and all sorts of handmade crafts, are largely a dying art. There's unquestionably a _quality_ advantage to that handcrafting, but the _cost savings_ of the mass-produced stuff means that by-in-large, we're stuck with the inferior, if efficiently-produced, mass produced version.
I fear that's exactly where software engineering is going. To an extent, it's already been moving down that road, but the introduction of powerful AIs that can largely negate any need for carefully cultivated engineering skill is going to turn what is currently an area of high skill and at times arguably artistic talent into, well, factory mass-production lines of low-skilled labor. And the result will certainly be cost-effective, but it'll also be noticeably inferior, though it will probably remain at least _serviceable._
Yet another skilled trade sacrificed on the alter of mass production.
Satya was the most genuinely pumped that I've ever seen. Very interested to see where the company goes next.
I wonder did they hired the same people to Wow and Whistle in the background from Apple events 🤔 because they sound the same 😂
13:49 When they clapped for “substring(0, 10)” 😂
Like Mii characters.
Cool, and thank you for not increasing the price
Wow, Miley Cyrus not only acts and sings, she’s also a product manager at GitHub.
Lol glad someone else noticed this too 😂
@@adityamwaghsame LOL!
I thought i was the only one 😁
Ze German developers ;). Early adopter here, it’s been certainly interesting. Good at easy things, deceivingly bad at complex things. But I’m all cases it prevents a writer’s block. Hell, I even enjoy writing documentation with copilot as my partner
i think the same as you, for giving ideas is great at complex stuff
it makes you wonder: is writing documentation even needed in the future? If you use copilot to write documentation, then any other engineer could use copilot to write similar documentation aka to understand undocumented code.
Tabnine early adopter here. Co-pilot is pitched as the leading bot pair programmer. That will change very quickly once developers realise they can choose from a range of platform agnostic AI coding assistants. Subscription pricing tiers start low and then the classic corporate enterprise tiers get introduced. Once you can't code without it, you're dependent on the bot.
And just like that, we don't have jobs! Marvelous! 😃
This is sooo exciting. Can't wait to use this :)
I wish I could hit thumbs up 10 times for this video. I just kept getting more and more excited
13:05 second hint in the first demo about llm output not being as expected and falling back to failsafe ...
8:44 was the first time where she was too afraid to use the llm created workspace, so she switched to a precreated one
İ mean thank you for highlighting it. However that doesn't diminish a bit on how great and how exciting the news are. What you say is true, however the world is not a snapshot and this iteration of the software is not sealed in stone. the system was, is, and will be, improving over time. what is true today might not be true tomorrow, and that is the key message! This is dope! is not perfect and doesn't need to be, as is a tool to speed up work, not the producer of final writen in stone, stagnant, untouchable code. And this tool is for adult, intelligent and ground in logic humans, not for brand new untrained people.
We're not you.@@ChatGTA345
It's unfortunate that co-pilot was unable to complete the demo task.
A good reminder that there's rarely a silver bullet.
😂 cybertruck moment fr
Actually the AI did it right. She replaced two lines instead of one. Still user error :D
@@robo-bot she still maintained impressive composure while doing it 👏
@@IntentStore yea agreed, on stage like that if anything goes wrong it's hard to improvise. but just pointing out the AI tech (which was being demo'd) was just fine
12:47 Its so good that she had to abandon Copilots instructions and use the premade demo code :P
Well this has been my experience with copilot since day one. Its either getting dumber or my projects get to complicated for it.
Anyways, i think copilot needs to be able to track a bigger picture of the project and get better at understanding the objective from that.
If she did a /fix on this, they'd have a massive gain in terms of public perception, as it would be apparent that they are equally as confident with their tools as their are with prepared demo code.
@@zwatotemor it still doesnt work and now its much worse than if they just used the demo code
it's insane that i had better results with genie in vs code (event with gpt 3 model) than copilot chat !
The coming technology is pretty exciting, and will definitely improve our lives in many ways.
There is still a lot of hype that is not yet warranted, but probably will be in the long term.
As others have mentioned, we need to be cautious since no technology is perfect, nor are humans and the interface is going to be rough at times.
Speaking of imperfect technology, what is going on with all of the video artifacts in this recording? 😅
I was just waiting for Satya to yell “Developers, developers, developers!”
36:00 Developers Developers Developers!
Holysshshsh I'm so happy for jetbrains IDEs having the chat now!!!!
and just like that we lost our jobs "applauses"
Brudda ion even know how to code gud. I proper feel like a caveman being told how fire works. Well, future is bright so I guess it's exciting having all these fun tools to learn and play with.
Not to be a doomer, but I couldn’t help but be reminded of that one love death and robots episode about the swarm when Satya Nadelle started talking about getting copilot in the hands of billions of people. If you missed the episode, the lesson was that when it comes to the longevity of a community/species, high individual intelligence may not be the best survival adaptation
"In a world where developer shortage is on the rise..."
Huh, really? Why the mass layoffs and impossibility of finding jobs in tech then?
Lol. The layoffs weren’t just developers, it was different fields too. Layoffs happened due to over hiring , not because chatgbt 3.5 was made public XD
@@dscsd9198 are you slow? where did I say anything about chatgpt and how does that invalidate what I said? You're just reafirming what I said, that there is no developer shortage.
Oh, and lol
You obviously associated layoffs with programmers, to which I replied that other roles were also affected by hyper hiring, rather than what most people state, AI Chatgbt lol
You dumb, go ask chatgbt how to reply to my comment XD
Oh man, this is Awesome!!!!!
Very outstanding Information. Thanks GitHub Team
Thats Superb and Unbelievable!!😮
Just AMAZING!
Amazing speaker!
Sahi hai! maine Oman vs Uganda match pe jeeta recently, har jeet ke saath maza double ho jata hai
Skeptical developers from around the world unite 💪 😎
Am convinced to get my subscription now lol
This was truly fascinating. Wow
😂 all developers here don’t want to say it but they know it in their heart. This presentation shows that companies will be able to grow with 0.1 percent of their engineers. Only very high level positions and research scientists are going to have jobs. This is inevitable
I'm excited for this!
One day this will totally replace programming
Wiah you all the best ❤
Yes, and in order to achieve that, you are using your members code without asking for permission! Just as if it were yours!
Imagine if governments used GitHub to manage their legal frameworks so that they were all open source and we could see all the pull requests and all the issues. They could use natural language and all of the amazing productivity tools that software developers use to accelerate the development of systems that make society better
thank you :
15:09 github copilot chat in mobile , how CAN I GET IT ?
Primagen should be very happy about some of these features, finally.
Amazing transition>
I’m Thomas and I’m a developer developing developing developers
Very outstanding information. Thanks a lot
what about the code that can't be described in natural language any shorter than writing the whole step by step when writing the code directly is shorter to write and read, why don't we do the same for mathematics and just express all mathematics in natural language what about not writing boilerplate but abstracting it into library
I always like saying please to AI because you just never know, sounds funny but got me thinking at the same time
12:00 This is why new software is slow. People just don't think or optimize.
DO NOT SORT if you only need the minimum and/or maximum element !!!
You are unnecessarily using a O(n log(n)) when you only need O(n).
The problem is not that programmers will be replaced by AI, but if they don't hire good developers who know not just how things can be bone, but if they should be.
Thank Steve.
I’m Will and I’m a software developer and CEO
What a great keynote ! And exciting news
Now we can do so much in less time
Now if only copilot can keep us out of all the meetings that keep us from actually coding.
It frees you up for pre-meetings, meetings, and meeting post mortems.
Nope it can do the coding you do the meetings
Cheerleading for the end of human endavour 🎉
Hi I'm Ariful Islam leeton im software developer and website developer and Co founder open A. I And Co Pilot GitHub
I'm glad Stan Smith has given Klaus his body back 😂😂😂
This is amazing. Complete gamechanger !.
i can't wait until this is the level of gpt 4.5, this is cool, but I like saying hey build me this function add that function and having it work without knowing any coding. this is one line at a time, I could print that out with one prompt in gpt...
ya'll got to admit the senior PM looks and sounds like Miley Cyrus
السلام عليكم ورحمه الله وبركاته 🎉❤
Github doing AI is like Spotify creating music - it boggles me.
Bhai main to process enjoy kar raha hoon, jitni bets, utni jeet, 4rabet pe betting ka maza hi alag hai
Increase Copilot response length in Chat, wordwrap in the code block chat gives
Ty for that AI , it does help the productivity as well as efficiency, ❤❤❤
Super!
I've been dreaming of this my entire 8 months.
Not a word about data privacy
Exactly. All your data is now belong to Microsoft
Where is VIM support 😢
DOPE!
Now I have to pay a multimillion company a service subscription to do my job properly or I'm out of the market, great stuff!
Crazy how that works right! Pay $20 to be 50%+ more productive. Watch outttttttt! Clown
if not having copilot would put you out of work. Then you are never meant to be out in the market.
Ha, that comment reads like software engineering is getting into adult hood 😂 Nobody is forcing you to buy the market leading product. It enforces what‘s market leading. “Now I need to pay to do my job”: All industry professionals like Creatives (Adobe), Architects (AutoDesk), Mechanical Engineers (Solid Works), Tax Accountants (QuickBooks/SAP/Xero/Datev), Laywers, Doctors, Retailers, …… want to send congratulations on growing up. Just shows how immature this industry still is - not even understanding where one is in the value chain.
@@dinoscheidt Sure, like creative people loves to pay big tech companies like Adobe to be able to do their job, that's completely false, they usually are the most against it even tho they use it daily or seek free/open source alternatives or resort to other measures. I mean if Im working for a company that are paying the licences its fine and its great, but this definitively kills the freelance spirit of doing stuff not for profit but for the sake of it. I hope at least this "new revolution techonoly" is given to all the open source maintainers out there working for free
@@ChatGTA345 That's great expectations, the thing is not all developers have the connections, resources or knowledge to do that, specially new ones. Let's hope businesses don't screw us so much and actually good business with good developer experience and career building start growing
EVERY TIME PINK JACKET LADY SAYS 'NOW' TAKE A DRINK
What about real-life work with big and complex project?
What real work sir. This is not going to completely replace tech jobs. Only 1% of tech jobs are going to remain. High level research scientists and system designers and 1 software engineer to make clicks for generation and supervision. Nothing else
Welcome to corporate legal and volunteered espionage.
I like the progress in this area and the new features, but I'm lost in all those products and brands. Why can't we just know that Copilot now can do X Y and Z, so focusing on single "agent", and not on the exploding amount of different names which i bet no 9ne will ever remember.
Is Copilot being updated to support GPT-4 128k context lengths within VS Code? Please don't make me use Visual Studio
Same, but also don't make me use VS Code. It shouldn't be torture to use a better copilot.
It has to. That model was made for improving efficiency
GET IN DA CHOPAAAAAAAAA...
My guy sounds like doctor dufenshmurf
I am Fabio, and I'm a 38 years old Dev student. =) Let's connect.
Wait, CEO barfs code on team and then makes the code reviewer write the tests? Yup, C suited confirmed.
Also "Explain this code" needing a billion dollar tool to deal with the fact the code is illegible? I'm getting grumpier by the minute.
I really like the partner program stuff though. Will save a lot of time vs logging into dashboards of 100 tools.
Great stuff really. I can see myself using all of this actually 😅
Just run that PR descriptor accross GH where needed and done (add the note it's generated). Good job
Thomas Donkey - CEO, GitHub
It's concerning to witness how software engineers are destroying their profession
goddam that german accent is so cool
7:43 VS code demo from blank
I'm Pranesh and I am a developer.
"finishing the grave"
github workspace is gonna accelerate OS projects like crazy. But it looks like its gonna take away the collaboration since AI can just keep building. Gonna be lonely
What happened to the Copilot X?
As a German with a similar German accent, I constantly hear Klaus Schwab talking… 😅
I love how diverse their presenters are when we all know in reality the people who built this were 95% white and Asian guys
Always a shame when they can’t recognise the workers and shove woke on stage.
Does it work with bitbucket? 😅
this is interesting.