Where have you worked? I have seen this mentality among the smartest most accomplished people I've come across who do things like debug kernel issues at Google Cloud. Yes, those people need to really know fundamentals.
90% of people building whatever junk their company needs does not. I learned this lesson the hard way after working at both large and tiny companies. Its the people that remain in the bubble of places like AWS, GCP or people doing hard core research or engineering that have this mentality. Everyone else eventually learns.
>Excel proves the rule. It's objectively terrible: 30% of genomics papers contain gene name errors from autocorrect, JP Morgan lost $6bn from formula errors, Public Health England lost 16,000 COVID cases hitting row limits. Yet it succeeded at democratisation by accepting catastrophic failures no proper system would tolerate.
Excel is the largest development language in the world. Nothing (not Python, VB, Java etc.) can even come close. Why? Because it literally glues the world together. Everything from the Mega Company, to every government agency to even mom & pop Bed & Breakfast operations run on Excel. The least technically competent people can fiddle around with Excel and get real stuff done that end up being critical pathways that a business relies on.
Its hard to quantify but I am putting my stake in the ground: Excel + AI will probably help fix many (but not all) of those issues you talk about.
The issues I’m talking about are: “we can’t debug kernel issues, so we run 40 pods and tune complicated load balancers health-check procedures in order for the service to work well”.
There is no understanding that anything is actually wrong, for they think that it is just the state of the universe, a physical law that prevents whatever issue it is from being resolved. They aren’t even aware that the kernel is the problem, sometimes they’re not even aware that there is a problem, they just run at linear scale because they think they must.
Excel is the largest development platform because it's installed on (pretty much) every corporate PC by default, without having to ask Legal, Security, Finance or IT for approval. If we count Google Sheets as "Excel", the people who don't have access to it are a rounding error, if that.
BUT
With the arrival of Agentic AI, I've literally seen complete non-coders (copywriter, marketing artist, and a Designer) whip up tooling for themselves that saves them literal days of work every week.
Things that would've been a Big Project in the company, requiring the aforementioned holy quadruple's approval along with tying up precious dev + project management hours.
In the end they're "just" simple tools, simulating or simplifying different processes, but in a way they specifically need it done. All built from scratch in the time it would've taken us to have the requisite meetings for writing the spec for the application and allocating the resources needed - "We have time for this on our team backlock in about 6 months..."
None of them are perfect code, some of them are downright horrible if you look under the hood. But on the other hand they run fully locally, don't touch any external APIs, they just work with the data already on their laptops, but more efficiently than the commercial tools (or Excel).
Zapier, N8N and the like _kinda_ gave people this power, by combining different APIs into workflows. But I personally haven't seen this kind of results from them.
Doesn't every personal computing device on the planet have a browser and thus Javascript? Aren't there more mobile devices than laptops and desktops? I'm an Excel dev and I'm pretty sure that Javascript is the largest development language in the world.
90% of people building whatever junk their company needs does not. I learned this lesson the hard way after working at both large and tiny companies. Its the people that remain in the bubble of places like AWS, GCP or people doing hard core research or engineering that have this mentality. Everyone else eventually learns.
>Excel proves the rule. It's objectively terrible: 30% of genomics papers contain gene name errors from autocorrect, JP Morgan lost $6bn from formula errors, Public Health England lost 16,000 COVID cases hitting row limits. Yet it succeeded at democratisation by accepting catastrophic failures no proper system would tolerate.
Excel is the largest development language in the world. Nothing (not Python, VB, Java etc.) can even come close. Why? Because it literally glues the world together. Everything from the Mega Company, to every government agency to even mom & pop Bed & Breakfast operations run on Excel. The least technically competent people can fiddle around with Excel and get real stuff done that end up being critical pathways that a business relies on.
Its hard to quantify but I am putting my stake in the ground: Excel + AI will probably help fix many (but not all) of those issues you talk about.