Jeff Dean, a senior Google scieist, said artificial ielligence could soon reach the skill of the new software engineer.
“It’s not too far away,” said Business Insider, a senior Google scieist who was prese at the AI Asce eve. “I claim that this will probably happen for about a year in the next year,” he said.
Artificial ielligence is a threat to the job of programmers

Many technology leaders have made similar predictions to this day. Artificial ielligence models are becoming more and more advanced in programming, and artificial ielligence -based tools have become more popular among developers.
In the meaime, with the widespread wave of firing in the technology industry, novice engineers are now facing fierce competition. These engineers must also deal with increasing competition with artificial ielligence.
Google’s senior scieist pois out that artificial ielligence must still learn skills beyond the basics of programming so that it can provide work at the human level. “This hypothetical engineer needs something beyond writing a code in the IDE,” he said. “It needs to know how to execute the experimes and discipline performance problems, and so on.”
Jeff Dean said about how artificial ielligence can acquire these skills, said that the process would not be very differe from the learning process of these skills. “We know how human engineers do it,” he said. “These people learn how to use the various tools we have and use them to do things, and they usually get this knowledge from more experienced engineers or by reading documeation.”
Google’s senior scieist said in the process, research and experimeation play a key role, and of course the role of these virtual engineers in the future will be very impressive that they can move humans ahead.



