> ... but I'm still waiting on others most of the time, the overall company processes haven't improved or gotten more efficient. The same blockers as always still exist.
And that's the key problem, isn't it? I maintain current organizations have the "wrong shape" to fully leverage AI. Imagine instead of the scope of your current ownership, you own everything your team or your whole department owns. Consider what that would do to the meetings and dependencies and processes and tickets and blockers and other bureaucracy, something I call "Conway Overhead."
Now imagine that playing out across multiple roles, i.e. you also take on product and design. Imagine what that would do to your company org chart.
I added a much more detailed comment here: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47270142
> Imagine instead of
> Now imagine
> Imagine what that would do
Imagine if your grandma had wheels! She'd be a bicycle. Now imagine she had an engine. She could be a motorcycle! Unfortunately for grandma, she lives in reality and is not actually a motorcycle, which would be cool as hell. Our imagination can only take us so far.
To more substantively reply to your longer linked comment: your hypothesis is that people spend as little as 10% of time coding and the other 90% of time in meetings, but that if they could code more, they wouldn't need to meet other people because they could do all the work of an entire team themselves[1]. The problem with your hypothesis is that you take for granted that LLMs actually allow people to do the work of an entire team themselves, and that it is merely bureacracy holding them back. There have been absolutely zero indicators that this is true. No productivity studies of individual developers tackling tasks show a 10x speedup; results tend to be anywhere from +20% to minus 20%. We aren't seeing amazing software being built by individual developers using LLMs. There is still only one Fabrice Bellard in the world, even though if your premise could escape the containment zone of imagination anyone should be able to be a Bellard on their own time with the help of LLMs.
[1] Also, this is basically already true without LLMs. It is the reason startups are able to disrupt corporate behemoths. If you have just a small handful of people who spend the majority of their work time writing code (by hand! No LLMs required!), they can build amazing new products that outcompete products funded by trillion-dollar entities. Your observation of more coding = less meetings required in the first place has an element of truth to it, but not because LLMs are related to it in any particular way.