I will do the same thing I did on all of the previous occasions when new automation ate my job: move up the ladder of abstraction and keep on working.
I haven't written any actual code for a couple of decades, after all: I just waffle around stitching together vague, high-level descriptions of what I want the machine to do, and robots write the code for me! I don't even have to manage memory anymore; the robots do it all. The robots are even getting pretty good at finding certain kinds of bugs now. A wondrous world of miracles, it is... but somehow there are still plenty of jobs for us computer-manipulating humans.
I haven't written any actual code for a couple of decades, after all: I just waffle around stitching together vague, high-level descriptions of what I want the machine to do, and robots write the code for me! I don't even have to manage memory anymore; the robots do it all. The robots are even getting pretty good at finding certain kinds of bugs now. A wondrous world of miracles, it is... but somehow there are still plenty of jobs for us computer-manipulating humans.