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This article is based on vibes just like the trends it hypothesizes.

To pick just one claim:

“Big companies used to move slowly, but now a ragtag team of two developers at a large firm can whip up something that looks top-of-market to the untrained eye in a matter of weeks.”

This is just pure speculation with no consideration of success or longevity. Big companies are going faster now? Where? Which ones?

AI coding allows you to build prototypes quickly. All the reasons big companies are slow haven’t budged.



>This is just pure speculation with no consideration of success or longevity. Big companies are going faster now? Where? Which ones?

Yes but there is a more fundamental problem. The claim doesnt even make sense:

>“Big companies used to move slowly, but now a ragtag team of two developers at a large firm can whip up something that looks top-of-market to the untrained eye in a matter of weeks.”

That was never the problem. I mean really, what is the implication of this? That big companies moved slowly because the developers were slow? What? No one thinks that, including the author (I imagine).

Its from many layers of decision-making, risk aversion, bureaucracy, coordination across many teams, technical debt, internal politics, etc.

This manifests as developers (and others) feeling slowed down by the weight of the company. Developes (and others) being relatively fast is precisely how we know the company is slow. So adding AI to the development workflow isn't going to speed anything up. There are too many other limiting factors.


Whenever people ask me about my job, I always say it’s about 20% programming, 80% dealing with people and I’m not even in a leadership position.

AI has not helped me at all in my corporate job, however on my start up it has been a game changer.


Even with all these tools available, big companies would still be unable to compete in speed simply because in 99% of cases they don't have the required culture set in place.


Yeah, the line about big companies suddenly moving fast felt more like wishful thinking than grounded observation




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