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by terrib1e
1554 days ago
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I'm personally in the 'all-code'/'semi-code' camp, but only because I enjoy coding and absolutely love solving problems. But, if I'm being completely honest, I also enjoy being known as a wizard wielding powers mere mortals can only dream of. I think that the empowerment of having a skill others lack makes us feel worthy and drives this vehemence to no-code. With that being said no-code is the future and is the logical progression. I'm not saying the future is here yet or no-code is developed enough to take over, but when it is, it will relegate purists(full-code evangelists) to either switch their skills to helping develop it, go down to lower levels to help push the boundaries of hardware, or work on maintaining / slowly modifying enterprise programs. I could ask for some examples of things to refute this, but they will likely be anecdotal one offs that aren't as useful or unique as we think. Yea Yea enterprise code will live on for another millenia, but even the big sluggish machine I work for is constantly trying to find use-cases for no/low code solutions to save money. Let's be open and honest for one second, couldn't most(emphasis on MOST )enterprise and small business apps, dashboards, and helper programs be done with no code? The article is an ad, we get it, but it's pointing out that you're still the wizard and master of the universe you (and most importantly the less technical plebs) perceive you to be. You may just be dragging and dropping pieces of logic to create a program, but you are the Sherlock Holmes of that solution. Not to mention that you can still alter the boilerplate pieces or create custom ones if you need it to do your specific bidding. Anyways, how is everyone doing today? |
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