😮‍ Coding Will Never Be the Same

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💻 Stack Overflow Is in Trouble (But They’re Not Giving Up)

If you’ve ever searched a coding problem at 2 AM (guilty), chances are Stack Overflow was your lifeline. And if you haven’t I guarantee a coder in your life has. But things have changed, fast.

Key Facts

  • 📉 Big Drop in Activity: In April 2025, new questions dropped by over 64% YoY and by 90% since 2020.
  • 🤖 Rise of AI Assistants: Tools like ChatGPT and GitHub Copilot are now the go-to for devs looking for quick, context-aware answers.
  • 💬 Community Exit: Strict moderation + unfriendly vibes = migration to Reddit, Discord, and more collaborative spaces.

When I first posted on Stack Overflow (14 years ago), it felt like joining a global conversation with developers who were just as passionate (or confused) as I was. Its a forum for coders around the world to post their questions and get support from others who run into the same challenges. 

Think Reddit for nerds, without the attitude. 

It actually makes me a little nostalgic for the camaraderie.

Looking at my account I see contributions I made years ago with comments like “great answer!”, and “worked for me, thank you!!” and there’s a feeling of pride knowing I’ve helped so many with small things that were big to them.

But so much is changing, so fast. 

When I’m vibe coding now, I don’t go look for my own answers, I make AI do it. 

Just look at this graph showing the # questions asked over time.

stack overflow is dead graph

They essentially are back to the point of where they launched.

These days devs want speed, clarity, and a little less judgment.

So what’s Stack Overflow doing about it?

They’re betting big on OverflowAI, their platform-wide pivot to integrate generative AI into the dev workflow:

What They’re Rolling Out
  • 🧠 Semantic Search powered by vectors for smarter queries
  • 💬 Slack Bot called StackPlusOne for real-time team help
  • 🧩 VS Code Extension to bring 58M+ Q&As into your IDE

The goal? 

Merge the speed of AI with the credibility of community-vetted answers.

Even if you’re not writing code, the implications are huge. This is a peek into how AI can take complex tasks across various industries, think drafting legal documents, analyzing financial data, or designing marketing campaigns.

Why It Matters

This isn’t just about code.

It’s a wake-up call for any platform built on user-generated content. If AI gets too good at delivering answers, people stop showing up and if they stop showing up, the community dies.

Case in point – I had to reset my password to get back into my forgotten StackOverflow account to write this article, that’s the real BTS.

Some things to think about:

  • Can companies make a comeback while AI is out-pacing them?
  • What does “community” look like in an AI-first world?
  • And if you run a business reliant on shared knowledge, how are you adapting?

🤖 OpenAI’s Codex Is Quietly Becoming Your Favorite Coworker

Imagine explaining what you want your code to do in plain English, and voilà the code appears.

I know you might not be a coder, but stick with me on this.

Key Facts

  • ⚡ Quick Productivity: Codex takes care of the tedious tasks, giving developers more time to innovate.
  • 📝 Multilingual Support: While it’s a whiz with Python, it also speaks JavaScript, Go, TypeScript, and more.
  • 🔒 Built with Security in Mind: Operates in secure cloud environments to keep your projects protected.

OpenAI recently launched Codex. 

Built on a new model to serve developers, connecting directly with their code and the vision that you’ve got a coding assistant that works with you, and in the background, doing whatever you need. 

Honestly, it’s starting to feel like Codex is a virtual pair programmer and Jr. engineer you didn’t need to hire.

And for engineers, it opens up a ton of new workflows, especially when paired with tools like GitHub or VS Code.

Why You Should Care (Even If You Don’t Code)
This is about more than writing software. Codex is a peek into what’s coming for every industry:

Legal? Auto-draft contracts.

Marketing? Generate campaigns

Finance? Build analytics pipelines.

Product? Prototype apps with no-code prompts.

And for devs?
This is a huge leap in productivity. No more reinventing the wheel or writing boilerplate. You just focus on the creative, strategic stuff and let Codex handle the rest.

Here’s Where We’re Headed:

  • 📈 2025–2027: Codex & coding tools becomes standard for repetitive coding tasks
  • 👨‍🏫 2030’s – New roles emerge: Prompt engineers, AI code reviewers, system integrators
  • 🌍 By 2040: Most code is AI-generated, and developers become architects, strategists, and AI trainers

I can see all this happening in half the time as well.

So whether you’re knee-deep in code or just curious about where tech is headed, Codex isn’t just a tool, it’s a glimpse at the future of work. 

If you’ve got a code background, play around with it and give it a try. 👇👇👇

🔗 Explore OpenAI Codex 🔗

And if you don’t but see the writing on the wall and want to start prototyping, ideating and growing what you know can go faster..

Check out my latest offering: bara.ai 🔗

Gone are the days of long, drawn-out processes with huge budgets in order to create an idea.

It’s time to take this seriously, and support what already works – or bring to life what’s on your heart, without the feeling of regrets and what-if’s. 

Let’s bring that vision of growth to life you’re stuck on. 

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