🎭 Two types of builders. Opposite feelings.


I'm sure you've already heard about this little thing with a medium impact on our lives: AI.

Everyone is busy studying the latest model, sharing their newest skill.md, or trying the latest way to integrate it with R. Well, at least I am!

For those of us working on computers, AI has a massive impact on our everyday lives. It's an important and fascinating topic.

But there's something I feel nobody talks about much:

The love for coding

15 years ago I watched my internship supervisor build a graph in front of me with R. The first lines of code I had ever seen. It blew my mind.

A few months later I built a Christmas tree in R during a genetics class instead of listening to the lecture. It made all my classmates laugh.

Then, across 12 years as an employee, I spent my nights and weekends exploring package vignettes, hunting for a chart variation that wasn't yet in my graph galleries.

Writing code has always felt like playing a video game to me. You struggle hard. 100% of your brain is locked on a single puzzle. And when you solve it and something beautiful appears on your screen, the endorphin hit is marvelous.

It always felt like playing and learning.
Never like working.

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2 types of pleasure

When you use code to build things, there are 2 types of pleasure.

The first is the struggle itself. Crunching code is like playing chess, and I love that feeling of brain sweat. I know I'm not alone: every great developer I've met shares this love for the act of programming itself.

The second is reaching the end result. Turning a thought into something alive is deeply satisfying, especially for us dataviz people. Finally revealing what was hidden in the data, or landing on something beautiful, is such a joy.

But...

AI killed #1

I barely write code anymore. Used properly, and with a bit of knowledge about your field, AI does it all for you.

Take D3.js.
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It is, without question, the best tool for data visualization. Unlimited customization and interactivity. The pinnacle, but also notoriously the hardest one to learn. It took me 10 years to get decent at it.

Yet 2 months ago I launched an online course on it. Students who started from zero already build stunning graphs and dashboards.
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Here is an example by Bernadett Piros:

They even come up with interactive patterns I had never thought of before (1, 2).

Some barriers remain. What tech stack should you use? How do you integrate the AI properly? How do you publish your work? How do you set up a project? What chart type fits? What are the main dataviz caveats?

You still need the general knowledge to communicate with the AI and drive it on the right direction.
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But the act of coding is gone. Or almost.

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2 types of people

I see a lot of people excited about this shift, and I get it!

So many were frustrated by code. They can finally build their dreams in minutes.

But I'll be honest: I feel the opposite. I miss pleasure #1. And without the struggle before it, pleasure #2 feels almost empty too πŸ˜”.

On top of that, my days have become strangely boring. Claude takes somewhere between 30 seconds and 3 minutes to answer a prompt. Too short to multitask, too long to stay focused.

I tried running two projects in parallel to fill the gaps. It worked, but it made for an exhausting day I couldn't sustain.

If you've found a workaround, I would genuinely love to hear it.

The future

This issue is a very personal one. For the first time in my life, my days at work aren't as fun as they used to be, and I'm thinking hard about what my next move should be.

I do know I'll keep pouring energy into my d3 loves react project. I'm certain many people will move to this technology soon. There is no reason for using anything else nowadays. And watching my students gain these superpowers is the most satisfying feeling.
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Concerning the data consulting side of my work, I need to think.
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The good news? I'm expecting a daughter in a few weeks! So I'll soon step back from tech for a while and think slowly about what comes next.

If any of this resonated, hit reply. I'd love to know I'm not alone in this boat, and to hear how you're dealing with it.

Talk soon,

Yan

Yan Holtz

​Find me on X, LinkedIn, or check my Homepage​

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πŸ‘‹ By the way, there are 3 ways I can help you!

  • Consulting: I help my clients design and create interactive dataviz webpages to make their data alive
  • Online Courses: 2000+ ppl already followed my in-depth, interactive learning experiences about R, matplotlib, ggplot2 and d3.js​
  • Engaging Talks: I'm deeply passionate about tech and dataviz. Hire me for a talk or a training!

Check yan-holtz.com or hit reply any time!

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