12 lines
1.7 KiB
JSON
12 lines
1.7 KiB
JSON
{
|
||
"HubID": "5745",
|
||
"Date": "03/02/2026",
|
||
"HubTags": ["Future Map", "External Platform Posts"],
|
||
"Contacts": ["contact1", "contact2"],
|
||
"Companies": "",
|
||
"File": "",
|
||
"Image": "no_more_code.jpg",
|
||
"Summary": "Could 90% of software coding jobs disappear inside five-years? Yes and here's what all those coders can do to leverage their expertise. Software code was originally created as a human-readable abstraction layer that ultimately compiles down to binary machine instructions. If AI increasingly operates at the machine-code or system-architecture level, it could compress or even bypass much of today’s traditional coding workflow. That doesn’t necessarily mean “no code,” but it could mean far fewer humans writing it directly. As AI agents gain deeper system access—designing software, provisioning infrastructure, deploying to cloud environments, and managing operations end-to-end—the role of the developer shifts from syntax author to intent architect. If human emulation and autonomous agent stacks continue advancing at their current pace, the interface may simply become: describe the outcome, and the system executes. Is that five years away? Three? Possibly less. What to do instead? Build specialized agents that others can rent. I have a few examples of agents I might rent in this working doc I created for me. https://docs.google.com/document/d/1_citc66qAkKL2IXAuPOvnor9P0hfxQbZ2z8daQnCxNQ/edit?usp=sharing Then, once an agent is created, use this guide I created to get your agent found in the AI era so the right person and the right time can rent it. https://docs.google.com/document/d/1HfdNZRC4823NvT1ID2ZQNrcW8PCT4czUlnIXROLY_20/edit?usp=sharing Via https://x.com/r0ck3t23/status/2021805528309956905",
|
||
"Notes": ""
|
||
}
|