Okay so let’s drop the fake motivation for a second.
The shift is real and yeah - it’s uncomfortable (as hell).
People are getting laid off.
Tools are evolving faster than we can even process.
Stuff that took weeks now takes hours.
and then someone casually says: just understand problems deeply bro
like that explains anything.
Zoom out for a second
10–15 years ago?
one smartphone per family, one computer in the whole locality, internet felt like a luxury
and still, the software industry was growing.
NOW?
Every person has a device
Every business runs on software
Entire economies are digital
and some people are saying:
“CS is dead”
that’s not just wrong ,that’s lazy thinking.
What’s actually happening?
Computer Science and technology is mutating into something we don’t fully have a name for (yet) and no this is not a “new tool” phase.
this is a new layer of reality being added.
Like avengers, it’s no longer just humans, it’s AI ,enhanced beings, agentic stuff , old rules stop applying
That’s where we are !!
The old definition of a “developer” is breaking.
Not slowly. Rapidly.
Earlier:
I can code = value
Now:
I can prompt, glue APIs, ship fast, leverage AI = baseline
and even that baseline is shifting every few months.
So yeah - if someone built their entire identity around:
syntax
frameworks
memorizing patterns
They will feel like the ground is disappearing.
because IT IS !!
People keep calling it “evolution”.
No.
This feels more like when Tony discovered JARVIS.
We’re not just improving workflows.
We’re changing:
how software is built
who can build it
how fast things move
what skill even means
Why the usual advice feels boring now
so now you need to:
adapt faster than tools change , unlearn aggressively , build with things you barely understand yet , stay calm when nothing feels stable
This wasn’t required before at this level.
basically you’re closer to Tony Stark in a lab than a traditional coder.
So what now?
Not “grind harder”.
Not “just learn DSA”.
Not “just build projects”.
That advice alone won’t cut it anymore.
What actually matters now:
- Can you move with uncertainty without freezing?
- Can you learn tools faster than they become obsolete?
- Can you ship even when you don’t feel ready?
- Can you stay in the game while others quit out of confusion?
Because that’s what’s filtering people right now.
Not intelligence.
Adaptability.
This phase is messy & undefined and bit scary ,exactly like every major shift ever.
but calling it “the death of CS” is just people panicking because:
the game they learned is not the game being played anymore.
The industry didn’t die, it just turned into something more powerful and harder to recognize.
and yeah, it does feel like Avengers.
not the calm parts.
the chaotic ones where nobody knows what’s going on,
but the people who stay in the fight end up shaping what comes next !!
let me know in the comments how you see this whole thing ?
Top comments (1)
Nailed it. Adaptability is the most important skill to have right now.
The evolution of software will keep creating many opportunities at different levels of abstraction. One beautiful phenomenon is that more and more people are able to build and bring their creations to life more seamlessly.