Close Menu
geekfence.comgeekfence.com
    What's Hot

    HCLTech acquires HPE telco unit

    December 29, 2025

    This tiny chip could change the future of quantum computing

    December 29, 2025

    What’s In a Name? Mainframe GDGs Get the Job Done

    December 29, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    Facebook Instagram
    geekfence.comgeekfence.com
    • Home
    • UK Tech News
    • AI
    • Big Data
    • Cyber Security
      • Cloud Computing
      • iOS Development
    • IoT
    • Mobile
    • Software
      • Software Development
      • Software Engineering
    • Technology
      • Green Technology
      • Nanotechnology
    • Telecom
    geekfence.comgeekfence.com
    Home»Cloud Computing»Development gets better with Age
    Cloud Computing

    Development gets better with Age

    AdminBy AdminOctober 29, 2025No Comments5 Mins Read0 Views
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Telegram Tumblr Email
    Development gets better with Age
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


    Now Go Build Header

    He has heard the whispers, “he is getting older, who will replace him?” People asking him with a straight face, “when will you retire?” After close to 25 years at Amazon, where each year has been different and amazing, He feels as young as the day he decided to leave academia and join Amazon.

    The thing about getting older as a developer, is that you have seen a lot and encountered many of the problems younger developers are facing (even if they look a little different on first glance). If you’ve been around the block as many times as some of us have, you’ll have earned battle scars along the way. There are days in war rooms you will never forget. You have experimented a lot, and you have failed more times than you care to remember. You have half-a-head full of what is practical and works. And a quarter of that space has been trained to look for red flags, scanning for things that you know will go wrong.

    What’s left in your head is used for creativity. Taking in all sorts of signals, building mental models, and coming up with new unique solutions. It’s the best part of our job. As developers, every day we get to create something new. Let that sink in for a second. Who else gets to do that? And that’s why I never take it for granted.

    As an older developer, you’ve also seen patterns repeat themselves… constantly. Companies promising the moon but only delivering a package of Swiss cheese.

    And along comes AI. Not the AI you’ve been using for the last 15-20 years: NLP, voice-to-text, text-to-speech, translation, image recognition, recommendations, fraud detection, all the things that Amazon.com was built on. No, we’re talking about generative AI, which even as an older developer, I’ll admit is really exciting. The speed of experimentation has dramatically increased. In the hands of a seasoned builder with a healthy dose of scepticism, it is powerful. But it’s also been challenging, because it wasn’t released like other technologies. No one educated users before release. The magic was just let out of the bottle, and because it was so unexpected, the hype absolutely exploded. And this feels strange to us, because we’ve been used to seeing our software evolve with minor version bumps that take a year or more to come out. It took 2 years for Windows 3 to reach Windows 3.1. And Mac OS X made minor version bumps from 2001 to 2019 before it started doing major version bumps each year. But it seems like every week models swap places on the leaderboard with each new version they release.

    AWS has always been a B2B company. We’ve always provided the building blocks that allow other companies to innovate for their customers (S3, EC2, DynamoDB, Lambda, DSQL). Yet amidst the hype, we were suddenly being compared to B2C companies. It was frustrating. But experience had taught us what to do. We went back to our roots, democratizing access to technology (models in this case), giving customers choice, keeping privacy and security as our top priorities, providing the guardrails companies need for safety and compliance, and leveraging automated reasoning to reduce potential model errors. That’s the value of having seen patterns repeat over decades – you know which ones work.

    The older developer isn’t worried about the barrage of new model announcements and feature releases that come out every week. He’s seen that before. New tech, same patterns.

    After all, over the past decades the older developer has probably learned more than 10 programming languages, tons of OSS libraries, and more platforms than he cares to remember. He was always keeping track of technology trends, reading papers, studying new directions, because that was the fun part of the job (you know, learning things). The older developer made sure he was fully prepared when his company was ready to start attacking problems where generative AI is uniquely suited. He’s also read Marc Brooker’s fantastic article about LLM-driven development, and will probably follow his advice.

    Almost every customer I speak with asks: “What should we be doing with gen AI?” The best response I’ve seen so far is from Byron Cook, one of our brilliant scientists: “Sorry for not answering your question immediately, but why did you ask me this question?”

    You’ll find that 90% of the answers you get back are not because they think generative AI will solve a specific problem that their business is encountering, but because they’re anxious. That they have very strong feelings of FOMO (the fear of missing out).

    And the older developer knows that this is exactly the time to press the pause button. To take a beat. He motivates juniors to get educated on the pros and cons, and that board & C-Suite read books like Jeff Lawson “Ask Your developer”.

    Then you do exactly what you’ve always done. Have an in-depth conversation with your customer, listen, dive deep into their challenges, suggest architectures, migrations, and tools. And sometimes, the solution will be generative AI.

    But as an older developer, you already knew this.

    Now, go build!



    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

    Related Posts

    Microsoft named a Leader in Gartner® Magic Quadrant™ for AI Application Development Platforms

    December 29, 2025

    New serverless customization in Amazon SageMaker AI accelerates model fine-tuning

    December 28, 2025

    Airbus prepares tender for European sovereign cloud

    December 27, 2025

    Reader picks: The most popular Python stories of 2025

    December 26, 2025

    Sustainability trends for 2026: From boardroom decisions to real-world systems

    December 25, 2025

    Cisco’s MCP Scanner Introduces Behavioral Code Threat Analysis

    December 24, 2025
    Top Posts

    Understanding U-Net Architecture in Deep Learning

    November 25, 20258 Views

    Microsoft 365 Copilot now enables you to build apps and workflows

    October 29, 20258 Views

    Here’s the latest company planning for gene-edited babies

    November 2, 20257 Views
    Don't Miss

    HCLTech acquires HPE telco unit

    December 29, 2025

    HCLTech moves toward a future of AI-driven growth In sum – what we know: The…

    This tiny chip could change the future of quantum computing

    December 29, 2025

    What’s In a Name? Mainframe GDGs Get the Job Done

    December 29, 2025

    Microsoft named a Leader in Gartner® Magic Quadrant™ for AI Application Development Platforms

    December 29, 2025
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    About Us

    At GeekFence, we are a team of tech-enthusiasts, industry watchers and content creators who believe that technology isn’t just about gadgets—it’s about how innovation transforms our lives, work and society. We’ve come together to build a place where readers, thinkers and industry insiders can converge to explore what’s next in tech.

    Our Picks

    HCLTech acquires HPE telco unit

    December 29, 2025

    This tiny chip could change the future of quantum computing

    December 29, 2025

    Subscribe to Updates

    Please enable JavaScript in your browser to complete this form.
    Loading
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Disclaimer
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    © 2025 Geekfence.All Rigt Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.