Great article. Where my mind goes as a counterpoint that proves the point is the famous Bill Atkinson lore about -2000 lines of code[0].
As a practicing architect (of buildings) I had a special fondness of working on minimalist projects. Buildings are a complex problem space. You typically can't design out unnecessary complexity entirely. So you have to work backward from goals (the finished condition) to infrastructure (the building structure) to figure out how to make the end product look like almost nothing (Mies's "beinahe nichts").
That's all to say that "complexity impresses" as the article says, but the discerning understand that simplicity can be even more impressive.
It also puts me in the frame of mind of another famous one - Fred Brooks's "No Silver Bullet" [1] and the idea of essential vs. accidental complexity. Or as I like to think of it in a slightly more nuanced way - not necessarily "accidental" but at least "incidental."
[0] https://www.folklore.org/Negative_2000_Lines_Of_Code.html
[1] https://worrydream.com/refs/Brooks_1986_-_No_Silver_Bullet.p...