Nah, that came later as the canonical example, with Ruby on Rails (which also somewhat suffered from a "programmers are irrelevant now" meme). Rails would make todo apps and twitter clones too cheap to meter (pretty much all Rails tutorials involved making one or the other in like an hour, pretty much entirely in the DSL).
In practice, Rails, while quite nice, was not the productivity revolution that it was originally touted as. These things never are.
Funnily enough todo lists didn’t really become a popular app category until the early 2000s. CASE tools in particular were very focused on enterprise applications.
rsynnott|12 hours ago
In practice, Rails, while quite nice, was not the productivity revolution that it was originally touted as. These things never are.
antonvs|22 hours ago