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Coding Chats episode 73 - John Crickett interviews Benjamen Pyle across topics ranging from tech influencer trust to the software engineer vs. craftsman debate. Benjamen argues that what makes an influencer worth following isn't follower count but authenticity and genuine intellectual evolution over time.The conversation then turns to AI, where Benjamen— initially a skeptic converted by Claude Code — observes that the developers getting the most out of AI are those with strong leadership and problem-solving skills, drawing a parallel between directing an AI assistant and managing a team effectively.
Chapters
00:00 Evaluating Tech Influencers
06:15 Craftsmanship vs. Engineering in Software
12:06 Career Ownership and Development
20:47 Finding and Utilizing Mentors
30:28 The Value of Diverse Mentorship
36:49 Navigating Careers Outside Big Tech
42:43 AI and Leadership in Programming
49:42 Exploring Related Content
49:50 Outro Final Coding Chats.mp4
Benjamen's Links:
https://binaryheap.com
https://pylecloudtech.com
John's Links:John's LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/johncrickett/
John’s YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@johncrickett
John's Twitter: https://x.com/johncrickett
John's Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/johncrickett.bsky.social
Check out John's software engineering related newsletters: Coding Challenges: https://codingchallenges.substack.com/ which shares real-world project ideas that you can use to level up your coding skills.
Developing Skills: https://read.developingskills.fyi/ covering everything from system design to soft skills, helping them progress their career from junior to staff+ or for those that want onto a management track.
Takeaways
Follower counts and engagement metrics don't equal credibility — dig into someone's post history and body of work before trusting a tech influencer.
Changing your opinion is a strength, not a weakness, as long as the change is driven by genuine learning rather than external incentives like sponsorships.
Most developers aren't truly "data-driven" despite the industry's rhetoric — people tend to follow trends and stay in safe, popular lanes.
The "software engineer" label is contested — real engineering disciplines are governed by hard facts and standards, whereas software dev still argues about tabs vs. spaces.
Many developers just want to clear their sprint tickets and go home, and that's fine — but it's a different mindset from those who treat the craft as a passion.
AI isn't just a code-writing shortcut — used well, it's more like coordinating a team of engineers, QA, and analysts all at once.
Developers who struggle with AI tend to be those who just spam it with prompts; those who thrive treat it more like a leadership and delegation challenge.
Strong soft skills — clear communication, problem decomposition, managing priorities — are turning out to be the key differentiator in who gets the most from AI tools.
Benjamen was initially skeptical of AI but changed his mind after hands-on experience with Claude Code, which he sees as a good example of his "strong opinions, weakly held" philosophy in action.
By John CrickettCoding Chats episode 73 - John Crickett interviews Benjamen Pyle across topics ranging from tech influencer trust to the software engineer vs. craftsman debate. Benjamen argues that what makes an influencer worth following isn't follower count but authenticity and genuine intellectual evolution over time.The conversation then turns to AI, where Benjamen— initially a skeptic converted by Claude Code — observes that the developers getting the most out of AI are those with strong leadership and problem-solving skills, drawing a parallel between directing an AI assistant and managing a team effectively.
Chapters
00:00 Evaluating Tech Influencers
06:15 Craftsmanship vs. Engineering in Software
12:06 Career Ownership and Development
20:47 Finding and Utilizing Mentors
30:28 The Value of Diverse Mentorship
36:49 Navigating Careers Outside Big Tech
42:43 AI and Leadership in Programming
49:42 Exploring Related Content
49:50 Outro Final Coding Chats.mp4
Benjamen's Links:
https://binaryheap.com
https://pylecloudtech.com
John's Links:John's LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/johncrickett/
John’s YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@johncrickett
John's Twitter: https://x.com/johncrickett
John's Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/johncrickett.bsky.social
Check out John's software engineering related newsletters: Coding Challenges: https://codingchallenges.substack.com/ which shares real-world project ideas that you can use to level up your coding skills.
Developing Skills: https://read.developingskills.fyi/ covering everything from system design to soft skills, helping them progress their career from junior to staff+ or for those that want onto a management track.
Takeaways
Follower counts and engagement metrics don't equal credibility — dig into someone's post history and body of work before trusting a tech influencer.
Changing your opinion is a strength, not a weakness, as long as the change is driven by genuine learning rather than external incentives like sponsorships.
Most developers aren't truly "data-driven" despite the industry's rhetoric — people tend to follow trends and stay in safe, popular lanes.
The "software engineer" label is contested — real engineering disciplines are governed by hard facts and standards, whereas software dev still argues about tabs vs. spaces.
Many developers just want to clear their sprint tickets and go home, and that's fine — but it's a different mindset from those who treat the craft as a passion.
AI isn't just a code-writing shortcut — used well, it's more like coordinating a team of engineers, QA, and analysts all at once.
Developers who struggle with AI tend to be those who just spam it with prompts; those who thrive treat it more like a leadership and delegation challenge.
Strong soft skills — clear communication, problem decomposition, managing priorities — are turning out to be the key differentiator in who gets the most from AI tools.
Benjamen was initially skeptical of AI but changed his mind after hands-on experience with Claude Code, which he sees as a good example of his "strong opinions, weakly held" philosophy in action.

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