firefax
yesterday at 4:05 AM
Maybe move to being a program manager or something? If you truly enjoy coding, don't stop, but try to make it a hobby?
I never enjoyed coding, it was a means to an end -- I was interested in systems administration and learned about infosec along the way, trying to protect my machine in an age when hard drive space was scarce and virtual machines weren't a thing -- you burned a CD and spun up Knoppix if you had decent ram...
Anyways, the things AI are doing is more "software carpentry" than "software engineering".
AI is not finding zero days. AI is not writing tight C to speed up I/O intensive processes.
OTOH, I don't have a career -- I bounced from UX research to policy to pentesting to being a SOC analyst, trying to find just... stability, respect, and a challenging environment.
When you're young it can be tempting to chase the perfect job but if you have one now, I'd try to get into a management position where you have a good work life balance. Find people you can trust to work under you, and treat them well. That isn't always a money thing -- letting them use their PTO, not screaming throwing things or hitting them, not forcing them to conduct every communication over email as if interactions that don't occur in writing are fair game to be manipulative...
Anyways I think the things AI will "solve" are stuff like when you're tweaking some code to parse a CSV or automating the standing up of a wordpress site.
As for trades? My dad was a carpenter. If things aren't being built, there's no work. It can be very boom or bust. Same goes for other trades -- having a salary and an office are big perks that a lot of folks take for granted.
One thing I didn't see mentioned is uni -- especially in AUS where it's lower cost, I'd do that if you have the chance. I struggled in high school, but when I got to pick my major, pick my classes, and be surrounded by others who actually enjoy learning I found I really enjoyed school. You'll get a chance to learn to write well, in a literary way. You can also dive deep on math and coding concepts you might struggle to teach yourself.
Try to find someplace that keeps your brain engaged, has good work life balance, and yes save aggressively... but your brain is still forming. You might not be the same person in ten years, in terms of ideas or tastes -- I used to be an XTREME dew chugging edgelord... now I listen to classical and drink tea.
Anyways, sorry to kind of ramble but it's annoying, seeing young folks like you buy into this AI hype.
It's not going to replace skilled coders, full stop -- and I'd focus on stuff like assembly, C, and other "bare metal" skills if you're truly concerned about that.