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| The first computer programmers didn't write code like today's software engineers. They made punch cards. | Then we invented better abstractions. Now, we're witnessing another massive shift. I recently built a full-featured web application with 35,000 lines of code. | I wrote exactly zero of those lines myself. After the first 5,000 lines, I stopped even reading the code. | I'd prompt the AI, auto-accept, make coffee, and return to find new features built. This isn't some distant sci-fi future. It's happening right now. | A third to half of today's cutting-edge startups primarily write code this way. Two batches ago, that number was approximately zero. | People argue these AI tools will never be good enough for "real" code. But like all transformative technologies, they start as toys before rapidly improving. | Learn AI in 5 minutes a day | | This is the easiest way for a busy person wanting to learn AI in as little time as possible: | Sign up for The Rundown AI newsletter They send you 5-minute email updates on the latest AI news and how to use it You learn how to become 2x more productive by leveraging AI
| Sign up to start learning. | The current trajectory is clear: these tools are getting exponentially better every few months. Others point to Jevons paradox—as coding becomes cheaper, demand for software will increase. | They're right, but that demand won't be met by human engineers. Like the combine harvester revolutionized farming, AI will dramatically increase software output while reducing human involvement. | The future isn't just about existing software becoming easier to create. We're moving toward on-demand custom software—where you describe a problem to an AI, and it spins up a personalized solution that disappears when no longer needed. | This doesn't mean the end of human involvement. High-agency individuals with clear vision and obsessive attention to quality will gain superpowers. The best products always have a human who deeply cares about solving a specific problem behind them. | For founders, there's never been a better time to start something. You can build with smaller teams what would have required 40 engineers just years ago. One person or a small group can own a high-quality experience without organizational friction. | Beyond software, this revolution is spreading to law, medicine, finance—every knowledge field. The cost of expertise is plummeting, creating massive consumer surplus but also disrupting careers. | What should you do? Stay current with cutting-edge tools. Get good at identifying human problems worth solving. | And recognize that we're living through perhaps the most exciting time in history to build something from scratch. The middle is disappearing. The truly elite are thriving. | And everyone else is becoming a builder with AI superpowers. |
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