This underlines the argument of the OP no?
The argument presented is that the situation where nobody knows how and why a piece of code is written will happen more often and appear faster with AI.
Indeed, it’ll just result in legacy code faster. We’d need AI to be much better in reliably maintaining code quality, architecture and feature rationale documentation, than the average developer in the average software project. And that may be indistinguishable from AGI.
Indeed, it’ll just result in legacy code faster. We’d need AI to be much better in reliably maintaining code quality, architecture and feature rationale documentation, than the average developer in the average software project. And that may be indistinguishable from AGI.