I rarely hear people talk about the fact that demand for new software will increase exponentially as cost to produce software crash. The ratios of devs_per_1k_lines_of_code_in_2022:devs_per_1k_lines_of_code_in_2028 and increase_in_demand:decrease_in_cost are unknown. But what if 1 dev could produce 300% more code, reducing eng cost (assuming same cost per hour per dev) to 1/3 of historical norms. Would that result in an increase of 20% in demand? Probably not, more like 1000%.If that's the case, there is a large net increase in demand for experienced devs who know how to use AI for coding. Demand will go up massively, I have zero doubt of that, but will AI get so much better that unskilled MBAs are making large complex apps? ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
bluefirebrand|9 months ago
AI companies are positioning themselves as "the everything machine"
The vast majority of software written today is "capture data -> transform data (optional) -> display data nicely formatted and easily accessible"
If an AI can wire into your database to retrieve the data in the format you want, then a bunch of the job is done
If the AI can also be made to present a form to users to capture the data in the first place, then almost all of the job is done
These are huge IFs. I remain skeptical that we'll reach this level soon. But if we do, the software industry is gonna tank
The AI industry will grow. Maybe.
AstroBen|9 months ago
'the everything machine' is pure fantasy and hype
heldrida|9 months ago
Software as we know it, will disappear.
hyperhello|9 months ago
hooverd|9 months ago
mistrial9|9 months ago
What does slavery for labor look like in high-skill urban setting? Rent, login credentials that are monitored, computer use is monitored, electricity is metered centrally, access to new model updates is monitored, required security updates are controlled via certificates and individual profiles, communication is by phone which is individually monitored for access patterns and location.. all very sci-fi eh?
hooverd|9 months ago