| You took me too literally there, that was intended as a thought experiment to explore the limits. What I was getting at was the question: If we feel intuitively that this extreme isn't realistic, what exactly do we think is missing? My argument is, what's missing is the human ability to play the game of being human, pursuing goals in an adversarial social context. To your point more specifically: Yes, that 10-person team might be replaceable by a single person. More likely than not however, the size of the team was not constrained by lack of ideas or ambition, but by capital and organizational effectiveness. This is how it's played out with every single technology so far that has increased human productivity. They increase demand for labor. Put another way: Businesses in every industry will be able to hire software engineering teams that are so good that in the past, only the big names were able to afford them. The kind of team required for the digital transformation of every old fashioned industry. |
Your hypothesis is AFAIU is that the company will just continue to scale because there's an indefinite amount of work/ideas to be explored/done so the focus of those 9 people will just be shifted to some other topic?
Let's say I am a business owner I have a popular product with a backlog of 1000 bugs and I have a team of 10 engineers. Engineers are busy both juggling between the features and fixing the bugs at the same time. Now let's assume that we have an AI model that will relieve 9 out of 10 engineers from cleaning the bugs backlog and we will need 1 or 2 engineers reviewing the code that the AI model spits out for us.
What concrete type of work at this moment is left for the rest of the 9 engineers?
Assuming that the team, as you say, is not constrained by the lack of ideas or ambition, and the feature backlog is somewhat indefinite in that regard, I think that the real question is if there's a market for those ideas. If there's no market for those ideas then there's no business value $$$ created by those engineers.
In that case, they are becoming a plain cost so what is the business incentive to keep them then?
> Businesses in every industry will be able to hire software engineering teams that are so good that in the past, only the big names were able to afford them
Not sure I follow this example. Companies will still hire engineers but IMO at much less capacity than what it was required up until now. Your N SQL experts are now replaced by the model. Your M Python developers are now replaced by the model. Your engineer/PR-review is now replaced by the model. The heck, even your SIMD expert now seems to be replaced by the model too (https://github.com/ggerganov/llama.cpp/pull/11453/files). Those companies will no longer need M + N + ... engineers to create the business value.