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by sanxiyn
1945 days ago
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Being able to do something by oneself is such a huge advantage over telling someone else to do something that it can compensate for lots and lots of disadvantages. HyperCard was a great success, and I have high hope we will have great low-code tools like HyperCard in the future. |
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I agree there can be massive advantages to tools in the "lower-to-no-code" spectrum; even software developers benefit from the abstraction that frameworks and tooling provide. At a business level, many organizations that offer products and service in said spectrum have been successful at a massive scale: Wordpress, Salesforce, Tableau, Shopify, just off the top of my mind.
However my point about these applications creating a cascade of new jobs still stands. And I don't think more hand-crafted "high code" solutions are going anywhere either; for starters I don't think anyone making this sort of prediction understands the literal oceans handcrafted of code we swim in. Who's going to take care of that, and how long would it take to replace with "no-code"? Well over a century, would be my guess. Software hasn't eaten the world - it has devoured it.
Then there's the natural limitations of these tools. I had to look up HyperCard as I didn't know about it, and it was indeed an initial hit, but it seems like (a) it was limited (for example, Wikipedia mentions people were making "choose-your-own-adventure" games with it, but I know as a fact that some games made by solo devs in the late 80s where infinitely more intricate and deep) and (b) it didn't have that much lasting power. I wonder if the latter is yet another limitation of these tools - that they tend to quick obsolescence as tech trends move at breakneck speed.