Well then I'm sorry but unfortunately they are going to be left behind.
People who are cut out to be software developers can afford the means of production.
LOL you think you own the means of production?
People who own the means of production own the company, which hires the board which hires the CEO who hires the executives who hire the manager who hires you. You think the people who own the means of production code? If you code you're closer to a bricklayer than to owning anything.
Sure they can also code without the help of a model, probably not that much slower.
Things that can only be used by an exclusive elite don't tend to survive, unless we're talking super-yachts.
AI is only going to work if enough people can actually meaningfully use it.
Therefore, the monetisation model will have to adapt in ways that make it sustainable. OpenAI is experimenting with ads. Other companies will just subsidise the living daylights out of their solutions...and a few people will indeed run this stuff locally.
Look at how slow the adoption of VR has been. And how badly Meta's gamble on the metaverse went. It's still too expensive for most people. Yes, a small elite can afford the necessary equipment, but that's not a petri dish on which one can grow a paradigm-shift.
If only a few thousand people could afford [insert any invention here], that invention wouldn't be common-place nowadays.
Now, the pyramid has sort of been turned on its head, in the sense that things nowadays don't start expensive and then become cheaper, but instead start cheap and then become...something else, be that more expensive or riddled with ads. But there are limits to this.
> People who are cut out to be software developers
You mean the people AI is going to replace? What's the definition of 'cut out to be' here?
Your identity as real software developer relies on the community's broad, inclusive definition of what it means to be one. Something you're failing to extend to others.
To be sitting that far out on a limb of software development while sawing at the branches of others is quite an interesting choice.
Pretty edgy response. I'd say trying to scale in price rather than in quantity is a bad business strategy for tech period, specially if you hope to become Google-sized like OpenAI and company want.
Are you OpenAI? If not, you don't afford the means of production. You're the sharecropper.
This is such a hilarious out of touch SV techbro comment I can't believe it's real. You're a monkey with a computer that knows how to Google, there's an endless amount of people who can replace you.
Big yikes bro.
The people who own "the means of production" isn't you.