It's not necessarily just the terseness. Terseness might be a selling point for people who have already invested in training themselves to be fluent with programming languages and the associated ecosystem of tooling.
But there is an entire cohort of people who can think about specifying systems but lack the training to sdo so so using the current methods and see a lower barrier to entry in the natural language.
That doesn't mean the LLM is going to think on your behalf (although there is also a little bit of that involved and that's where stuff gets confusing) but it surely provides a completely different interface for turning your ideas into working machinery
"[T]here is an entire cohort of people who can think about specifying systems but lack the training to sdo so so using the current methods and see a lower barrier to entry in the natural language."
"Specifying" is the load-bearing term there. They are describing what they want to some degree, how how specifically?