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An AI engineer hasn’t touched code since December. He’s excited about AI, but worries about the future.

This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Rohan Gore, a 38-year-old AI engineer at Reach3 Insights, a market research firm based in Vancouver. His identity and employment have been verified by Business Insider. The following has been edited for length and clarity.

I graduated with a computer science degree back in 2010, and I’ve worked in the industry since.

I started as a typical software engineer working on some of the interesting and complex problems in marketing research. Now, I’m an AI engineer.

I have mixed feelings about the impact of AI on the software engineering industry.

I completely handed off all my coding-related tasks to AI in December, and it did really well. I did not feel good about that initially. I’ve been coding for so long, and I realized at the time that coding is definitely gone.

I haven’t coded since then. That’s the new reality of my job. Just because AI has taken over my coding tasks, though, doesn’t mean I can play outside all day. I’m still able — and expected — to produce the same level of output and quality of work. Sometimes I feel burned out because the expectation is that I should be doing more work, even though AI can take over some tasks.

I’m excited about AI and enjoy how it’s changed my job

Right now, AI needs a lot of guardrails, and I believe that my background and systems knowledge still make me pretty useful.

I’m happy that I haven’t coded in three months because there’s a lot that I’m doing, like software architecture and design, that isn’t going anywhere. AI can help architect or design, but it needs a lot of hand-holding today. That makes the knowledge of software engineering more important than ever in the age of AI — at least for now.

There is also a lot of systems thinking that needs to be applied, which I love and am completely in harmony with, so it’s a good state for me.

I’ve been coding for years, and at the end of the day, it’s a means to an end. I never saw it as rocket science. But there is a lot of nuance to coding, which can be frustrating and tiring to work with at times. So, I’m enjoying this next era.

AI also lets me do a lot more research, and faster. It allows me to question product decisions and think more, rather than just execute. As an engineer, I was constantly under delivery pressure, but now it frees me up and actually allows me to critique what a project manager is doing, because I understand the product decisions that are being made. It helps me take on a broader product engineering role, which I’m enjoying.

I’m feeling happy that I can deliver at this pace, because that wasn’t possible earlier. It’s cool that I can make a feature in two or three days instead of a month. That’s a crazy transformation that I feel happy and excited about.

I’m concerned about the future

Even though I’m enjoying the current state, there’s always this behind-the-scenes thought of, “Ok, what’s next?” The technology is getting better every day. I’m not comfortable with AI being in a state where it can run on its own forever. I don’t know what I would do in that scenario.

It feels weird that the job has changed so much. Sometimes I find myself speechless. I have so many thoughts and emotions going on. Most of them have turned into excitement, but the more I think about it, the more it turns into fear. Sometimes I felt intimidated because these agents are so powerful.

I even openly said in my company’s Slack that there’s no way in my lifetime I could’ve coded something even 10% as good as these agents. At the end of the day, if you look at a typical problem, most humans are no match for solving them, unless you’re talking about the 1% geniuses.

Sometimes I feel defeated because coding was a skill I acquired over time and it took a lot of time to get to a state where I could do that well. It’s not that I don’t like the change, but there’s a fear there.

What happens if all of this gets completely automated and people just ask AI for things?




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Jobs report updates: US added fewer jobs in December than expected, but unemployment dropped

It’s jobs day in America.

The US added 50,000 jobs in December, and the unemployment rate dropped to 4.4%, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ monthly report on the employment situation.

Economists expected to see 70,000 jobs added in the final month of 2025, and an unemployment rate of 4.5%.

The report wraps up a year of a job market marked by a “Great Freeze” in which companies haven’t been hiring very much, employees haven’t been switching jobs a ton, but large-scale layoffs that would mark a deeper downturn haven’t materialized yet either.

Check back here for updates leading up to and following the biggest job market data release of the month.




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The 10 best movies to stream on Netflix in December

  • Movies like “Pulp Fiction,” “The Wolf of Wall Street,” and “Mean Girls” are coming to Netflix in December.
  • So are new releases like “Wake Up Dead Man” and “Jay Kelly.”
  • A four-part docuseries on Sean “Diddy” Combs also hits Netflix in December.

This month on Netflix, some hotly anticipated original movies are hitting the streamer, including the latest installment in the “Knives Out” franchise, “Wake Up Dead Man,” and the drama “Jay Kelly,” starring Adam Sandler and George Clooney.

Classic movies like “The Wolf of Wall Street,” “Mean Girls,” and “Pulp Fiction,” are also available. Keep reading for the 10 best movies coming to Netflix in December.

“Pulp Fiction” (December 1)

John Travolta and Samuel L. Jackson in “Pulp Fiction.”

Miramax

Quentin Tarantino’s foul-mouthed, ultra-violent landmark work brought 1990s indie film to new heights and led to countless copycats.

“Pulp Fiction” features thrilling vignettes filled with unique characters and storylines, including a boxer (Bruce Willis) determined to get a family heirloom, a couple (Tim Roth, Amanda Plummer) holding up a diner, and the outlandish day of two hitmen (John Travolta, Samuel L. Jackson).

“Stripes” (December 1)


Bill Murray pointing in Stripes movie

Bill Murray in “Stripes.”

Columbia Pictures

This comedy classic stars Bill Murray and Harold Ramis as two slackers who join the Army. But instead of shaping up, their antics lead to lots of laughs.

“The Wolf of Wall Street” (December 1)


the wolf of wall street

Leonardo DiCaprio in “The Wolf of Wall Street.”

Paramount Pictures

Leonardo DiCaprio and Martin Scorsese team up for this entertaining biopic on the rise and fall of Wall Street trader and financial criminal Jordan Belfort. Jonah Hill delivers a hilarious performance as Belfort’s best friend, while the movie marks Margot Robbie’s breakout performance as Belfort’s wife.

“Sean Combs: The Reckoning” (December 2)


Sean

Sean “Diddy” Combs.


ANGELA WEISS/AFP via Getty Images


This four-part docuseries executive-produced by 50 Cent dissects the life and career of Sean “Diddy” Combs. It also chronicles the fall of the hip-hop icon and features never-before-seen footage of Diddy in the days before his arrest.

“Mean Girls” (December 4)


Lindsay Lohan, Amanda Seyfried, Lacey Chabert, and Rachel McAdams in

Lindsay Lohan, Amanda Seyfried, Lacey Chabert, and Rachel McAdams in “Mean Girls.”

Paramount Pictures

Lindsay Lohan plays a new girl in high school who must learn to navigate different social cliques in this 2004 classic. The movie also launched the careers of costars Rachel McAdams (who also starred in “The Notebook” that same year) and Amanda Seyfried. The 2024 musical version is also available.

“Jay Kelly” (December 5)


Adam Sandler and George Clooney sitting in a movie theater in Jay Kelly movie

Adam Sandler and George Clooney in “Jay Kelly.”

Netflix

Noah Baumbach’s latest movie stars George Clooney as a famous actor who reflects on his life and career with his manager (Adam Sandler) as they travel through Europe.

“Babylon” (December 7)


Margot Robbie as Nellie LaRoy and Diego Calva as Manny Torres in

Margot Robbie and Diego Calva in “Babylon.”

Scott Garfield/Paramount

Damien Chazelle’s ambitious look at old Hollywood chronicles the biz in the 1920s and the stars who lost it all with the advent of the talkies. Margot Robbie and Brad Pitt star.

“Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery” (December 12)


Josh O'Connor and Daniel Craig inside a car in the movie Wake Up Dead Man

Josh O’Connor and Daniel Craig in “Wake Up Dead Man.”

Netflix

Rian Johnson’s latest tale in the “Knives Out” franchise features private detective Benoit Blanc (Daniel Craig) trying to uncover the murder of a priest (Josh Brolin). The all-star cast includes Josh O’Connor, Glenn Close, Mila Kunis, Jeremy Renner, Kerry Washington, Andrew Scott, Thomas Haden Church, and Jeffrey Wright.

“Goodbye June” (December 24)


Kate Winslet holding Helen Mirren's hand in a hospital bed in Goodbye June

Helen Mirren and Kate Winslet in “Goodbye June.”

Netflix

Kate Winslet’s directorial debucenters around four siblings whose lives change when their ailing mother takes a turn for the worse over the holiday season. The movie stars Winslet, Toni Collette, Andrea Riseborough, and Helen Mirren.

“Sleeping with Other People” (December 31)


Sleeping with other people

Alison Brie and Jason Sudeikis in “Sleeping with Other People.”

IFC Films

In one of the best rom-coms you’ve never seen, Alison Brie and Jason Sudeikis play two people with major commitment issues who try to stay in the friend zone but end up falling for each other.




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