"Not having a coding experience is becoming an advantage."
Replit CEO Amjad Masad:
"You don't need any development experience. You need grit. You need to be a fast learner."
"If you're a good gamer, if you can jump in a game and figure it out really quickly, you're really good at this."
"Coders get lost in the details."
"Product people, people who are focused on solving a problem, on making money, they're going to be focused on marketing, they're going to be focused on user interface, they're going to be focused on all the right things."
"I think this year it's gonna flip, and I think not having a coding background is gonna be more advantageous for the entrepreneur."
@amasad with @jackhneel
It feels like we crossed some critical threshold where everything is unbundling at once.
intelligence, labor, energy, attention, geopolitics.
and each one is accelerating the others, compounding.
that's a good question, I'm not a weapons expert, but here are a few scenarios I could naively imagine
- drone based target identification + engagement decisions in the cloud
- targeting and engagement decisions from autonomous missile systems
- all forms of cyber warfare
if the intention here is to constrain decision authority, the policy language should actually reflect that rather than being focused on compute topology