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frankie_t | 2 months ago
I would only be happy if in the end the author turns out to be right.
But as the things stand right now, I can see a significant boost to my own productivity, which leads me to believe that fewer people are going to be needed.
sokoloff|2 months ago
I can see a future where software development goes the same way. My wife works in science and I see all kinds of things in a casual observation of her work that could be made more efficient with good software support. But not by enough to pay six-figures per year for multiple devs to create it. So it doesn’t get done and her work and the work of tens of thousands like her around the world is less efficient as a result.
In a world where development is even half as expensive, many such tasks become approachable. If it becomes a third or quarter as expensive, even more applications are now profitable.
I think far more people will be doing something that creates the outcomes that are today created by SWEs manually coding. I doubt it will be quite as lucrative for the median person doing it, but I think it will still be well above the median wage and there will be a lot of it.
See: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jevons_paradox
encyclopedism|2 months ago
nevercat|2 months ago
Ironically, like an LLM, this article feels like more like an amalgamation of plenty of other opinions on the growth of AI in the workplace rather than any original thoughts. There's not really anything "new" here, just putting together a load of existing opinions.
(I am not suggesting that Jason got an AI to write this article, though that would be funny).