I have Claude Code Pro + Cursor Pro subs. It's $40/month and sets me up pretty nicely....
So, you just pay a noticeable amount of money ($4800 per seat and year. Or in my case, approximately the 1% of my gross salary before taxes, that I pay for union membership) for a programming language, that translates your non-human language (Ever tried talking to an coworker like you talk to an AI prompt? Please don't! * ) inputs into a (not really precise) representation of the target language....
And no, I don't think AI is really worth it (compared to the union membership). If you are a good developer, you don't need AI because it wastes time to explain a prompt what you already know. If you are slightly less good, a classic web search will always work better than an AI prompt. If you are a bad developer, AI only makes you worse. There is a small spot in the middle, where AI can really make you a better software developer, but that requires enough skill to notice if AI is bullshitting you (and it does. Always). If you jump from project to project and programming language to programming language, an AI could partially offset the lack of familiarization if you have no coworkers, that would otherwise give you the important knowledge (and architecture principles!) that you need for contributing to the next sprint. And once you outgrow this sweet spot (and you will), you will leave AI behind. And in my case, I am too specialized and too experienced in my tiny niche already for any AI to be helpful. Its like asking an AI how to maintain a steam engine. Too few people care about the topic as much as you do.
So, yes, I resist. I don't want to let corporate jerks streamline my job to the point, that any monkey could make money for them (and they will never let themselves be replaced by AI. Despite their decision processes being so drilled in, that they are a deterministic algorithm.) But does resistance mean, that I don't use it? No. I use it sporadically for summarizing what happens in bureaucracy, so I at least know a bit more about the emails I usually ignore, I take all AI training for some time investment that my company approves. And make AI solutions for customers, if they really want them...I learn. If you know yourself and know your enemy....
But... Is it feasible? I don't know. If you fight, you can lose. If you don't fight, you have already lost. I have around 20-25 years left to retirement, maybe AI will beat me first, maybe it will just outlive me. It won't go away. It will get better. It will make less errors. Know more industries. Get more insight in customers domains. One day, CEOs can create all the software of their companies by AI. Including the simulated applause of yes-man. And at that time, I will hopefully already (mentally, don't worry France!) have retired to a tiny gaulic village. And better have some skills left in me that I can use.
* For the fun of it, we just got informed via company mail that we shouldn't use more words than necessary for AI prompts, especially no politeness, since it wastes energy and might lead to (more) inaccurate results. Or course, less politeness by the users will eventually result in less politeness by the AI....