AI-Proofing Your Skillset - High-Meaning, High-Specifity Vocabulary is the Path to Growth
Developer Tea29 Huhti

AI-Proofing Your Skillset - High-Meaning, High-Specifity Vocabulary is the Path to Growth

  • Why I'm Not "Picking a Fight" on AI: A listener asked if I'm intentionally stoking a flame war by treating agentic coding as a foregone conclusion. The honest answer is that I've used it, the data points one direction, and a show built around pretending otherwise would slowly drift away from reality — and away from being useful to you.
  • Respecting the Misgivings, Without Getting Stuck in Them: Ethical concerns, skill atrophy worries, and questions about long-term effects are all legitimate. But the goal of this show is practical applicability, so we focus on mental models you can use Monday morning rather than litigating every angle of the debate.
  • The "Minecraft" Principle: If I ask you to "build Minecraft," I've handed you several chapters of specification in a single word. That's meaning-rich abstraction — language that points at a huge amount of shared context with very little token cost.
  • Meaning-Rich AND Specific: "Human history" is meaning-rich but uselessly broad. "Block-building game" is specific but loses fidelity. The sweet spot is vocabulary that is both compact and unambiguous — sitting in the top right of the meaning-density / specificity graph.
  • A Real Example — Strategy Pattern: When working on authorization rules, I didn't want a pipeline. Instead of describing base classes, shared interfaces, and parallel execution to the LLM, I used the words "strategy pattern." Three words did the work of three paragraphs, and the output landed where I wanted it.
  • Vocabulary as Leverage: Named patterns, named algorithms (Monte Carlo, etc.), named architectural concepts — these act like compressed pointers. The more of them you genuinely understand, the higher the leverage of every prompt you write and every conversation you have with another engineer.
  • How to Build This Vocabulary: Have conversations with senior engineers. Ask an LLM what patterns are at play in a codebase, which ones you're using incorrectly, and which ones you're tricked into thinking you're using. Learn the abstraction layer that sits one step above your day-to-day implementation work.
  • The Asterisk — Shared Context Required: This only works when both sides know the term. Public, well-documented concepts (patterns, papers, algorithms) translate immediately to LLMs. Private or organization-specific concepts need to be loaded into context — via CLAUDE.md, AGENTS.md, or skills — before that compression kicks in.
  • Episode Homework: Pick one area of your current codebase. Ask an LLM to name the patterns in play, the patterns you're using incorrectly, and the ones you might be missing. Use that conversation to add at least one new piece of meaning-rich vocabulary to your working set.
🙏 Today's Episode is Brought To You by: Unblocked

Your coding agents have access to your code base — and probably more — but access isn't the same as context. Agents can't reason well across MCPs on their own, they don't know your architecture decisions, and they don't know which docs are reliable versus written by someone in their free time two years ago. ● Unblocked is the context layer your agents are missing. ● It synthesizes your PRs, docs, Slack messages, and Jira issues into organizational context that agents actually understand. ● That means better plans, higher quality code, fewer tokens, and fewer correction loops. ● Whether you're running Claude Code, Cursor, Codex, or any agentic workflow, it's worth a look. Get a free three-week trial at getunblocked.com/developertea.

📮 Ask a Question

If you enjoyed this episode and would like me to discuss a question that you have on the show, drop it over at: developertea.com.

📮 Join the Discord

If you want to be a part of a supportive community of engineers (non-engineers welcome!) working to improve their lives and careers, join us on the Developer Tea Discord community today!

🗞️ Subscribe to The Tea Break

We are developing a brand new newsletter called The Tea Break! You can be the first in line to receive it by entering your email directly over at developertea.com.

🧡 Leave a Review If you're enjoying the show and want to support the content head over to iTunes and leave a review!

Tämä jakso on lisätty Podme-palveluun avoimen RSS-syötteen kautta eikä se ole Podmen omaa tuotantoa. Siksi jakso saattaa sisältää mainontaa.

Jaksot(1306)

Principles Oriented Thinking as a Durable Skill in an AI First World

Principles Oriented Thinking as a Durable Skill in an AI First World

The skills that survive every industry shakeup aren't the ones you can Google — they're softer, harder to name, and far more durable. In this episode, Jonathan explores principle-oriented thinking: th...

10 Kesä 27min

What the Science Actually Says About Effective Feedback

What the Science Actually Says About Effective Feedback

A lot of what we've been talking about lately is durable skills — the abilities that last regardless of how our tools and tech environment change. In today's episode, I want to step back from the AI c...

3 Kesä 27min

Rebuilding Your Mental Models In the Midst Of an AI Tech Revolution

Rebuilding Your Mental Models In the Midst Of an AI Tech Revolution

Right now, the questions we have about our careers feel existential. We keep coming back to the same theme: how do you prepare for an industry that's changing this fast, and what mindset actually work...

27 Touko 26min

Practice Isn't Enough for Senior Engineers - Adaptation Is a Key Skill in an AI-First Industry

Practice Isn't Enough for Senior Engineers - Adaptation Is a Key Skill in an AI-First Industry

If you're a software engineer right now, you likely feel like your world is changing overnight. We are writing half or less the amount of code that we wrote even a year ago, which represents a seismic...

24 Touko 19min

Senior Skills to Maintain Employment Through the AI Wave

Senior Skills to Maintain Employment Through the AI Wave

If you've heard that your job in the agentic coding era is to "become a manager of agents," you may have noticed something doesn't quite fit. Most of us never trained to be managers, and frankly, that...

14 Touko 28min

You're Wrong All the Time, But All You Need Are Better Explanations

You're Wrong All the Time, But All You Need Are Better Explanations

What happens when you discover that a book that fundamentally changed how you think is built on a shaky foundation? In today's episode, I share my own struggle with the replication crisis surrounding ...

6 Touko 25min

Building Real Skills During the AI Boom - No, Not That Kind of Skill

Building Real Skills During the AI Boom - No, Not That Kind of Skill

The Coding-Is-My-Value Trap: For years, we've treated the ability to write code as the flagship skill of software engineering. It's concrete, it's teachable, it's the thing big box stores sell kits fo...

22 Huhti 30min

Suosittua kategoriassa Liike-elämä ja talous

sijotuskasti
mimmit-sijoittaa
rss-rahapodi
psykopodiaa-podcast
rss-oivalluksia-rahasta-elamasta
asuntoasiaa-paivakirjat
oppimisen-psykologia
rss-ainin-sekatoimisto
rss-set-for-life-sijoita-ja-vaurastu
pomojen-suusta
rss-pariisilaiset
rss-kaupan-tila
hyva-paha-johtaminen
vapauta-supervoimasi-podcast
rss-startup-ministerio
rss-markkinointitrippi
rss-bisneksen-pehmea-puoli
rss-levosta-kasin-yrittajyys
rss-lentopaivakirjat
rss-viisas-raha-podi