| ▲ | anonymous908213 4 hours ago | |||||||||||||
The only people who think that are programmers already or programmer-adjacent. Your mother is never going to be able to use a Gas Town-like workflow to make software for her own needs, nor is she even going to want to spend her weekends trying. These tools still require a baseline minimum of technical knowledge, and a real time investment, and also a real money investment the way some people are using them. Moreover, most real software has interoperability needs. A world where everyone makes their own Twitter or WhatsApp is a world where nobody can talk to anyone else. There is a small subset of the population who is now enabled to make proof-of-concepts with less effort than before. This is no way diminishes the need for delivering performant, secure, interoperable software at scale to serve humanity's needs. | ||||||||||||||
| ▲ | blenderob 4 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||||||||
> Your mother is never going to be able to use a Gas Town-like workflow to make software for her own needs, nor is she even going to want to spend her weekends trying. I'm going on a tangent here but what's with this constant deprecation of mothers to make a point? There are many people here whose mothers can develop software. | ||||||||||||||
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| ▲ | throwway120385 4 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||||||||
What if we packaged Gas Town up in an operating system userspace, put it on rails, and gave people an interface to it? | ||||||||||||||
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