I was surprised to find that Data Engineering/Data Science pays significantly less than Software Engineering.
What is the most strategic/lucrative career move for an experienced software engineer, given that GPTs and other technology are eating software?
I'm not at a "freak out and do something nutty" stage with any of this yet (especially since my day-job involves progressively less and less hands-on coding over the last few years anyway). But I'm honestly not joking when I say the thought has occurred to me to attend the local community college and get a new degree in something that seems less likely to get automated away. That could range from something "blue collar" / manual like welding or CNC machining, to just a different "white collar" field like maybe "fire science" or "public safety administration."
I don't know for sure that I'm going to do any of that, but I've gone as far as visiting the webpage for said community college and poking around at what some of the available options are and giving at least superficial thought to planning out how I might approach something like this.
Even more importantly as AI takes over more jobs--and there's a full Ted Talk on this somewhere--humans must ensure that we don't break the chain of passing knowledge down to the next generation that has existed for millions of years, otherwise we may end up as a civilization of adult babies.