Blog

By Jake Hinton
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October 15, 2025
Jake's take. I recently found myself replacing a busted sprinkler system, a decidedly analog task, when I tuned into Sam Altman's latest podcast interview. Altman, the driving force behind OpenAI, embodies a classic Silicon Valley paradox: part visionary genius, part polarizing figure constantly swimming in controversy and deep philosophical water. But setting aside the intense moral and existential dilemmas he was pressed on, Altman offered an incredibly insightful take on the future of software development that resonated deeply with me. The common fear is that generative AI will flood the market with code, leading to massive displacement for human programmers. Altman argues this anxiety is based on a misunderstanding of market demand. For years, the world has operated with an artificially suppressed demand for new software. We have been unable to meet the global desire for great products, services, and creative digital solutions simply because human capacity—the ability to write, debug, and ship code—is finite. According to this view, AI doesn't create a supply surplus; it merely provides the capability to finally tap into this massive, unmet demand. Programmers who embrace the technology will become hugely augmented , allowing them to be more productive and innovative than ever before. In the near term, this means AI will help us build the "great things" we previously lacked the capacity to create, rather than immediately sending coders to the unemployment line. It's a surprisingly optimistic perspective, suggesting that for software creators, AI is less a replacement and more a sudden, dramatic upgrade in tooling.