Yesterday, I asked it to build a Minecraft clone. After about 20 minutes it gave me a basic voxel game with infinite world generation etc.
Obviously so many people made Minecraft clone long before LLMs so I would train dataset contained several implementation of it, hence it made me a working game in 20 minutes.
But it makes me wonder, everyone whose getting into the field probably used these tools to program projects and put it on their resume as well.
so how do y'all vet resume in 2026?
It's difficult to put much value in your personal projects without some form of social or commercial validation. Essentially, personal projects that aren't being used by anyone but you hold little to no value in terms of resume content.
Use the chalk to draw a numbered grid on the sidewalk; 10 should be fine.
Divide the resumes into 10 groups.
Cut the head off a chicken and see which number it wanders into. Repeat until you are down to one resume.
Done and far more efficient than all the current methods.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3Khvtqr-BxY
I have to admit to myself that programming skills alone are no longer what makes me valuable.
If I switch my role to that of a boss or manager, what kind of people would I hire?
My answer: those who show the ability or potential to deliver good results even in the face of significant non-technical difficulties.