Written by Fola Yahaya
Not content with trying to take down writers, photographers and translators, the relentless drive by Big Tech to slash their development headcount continues with this week’s confirmation from both Mark Zuckerberg and Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff that there is absolutely no point sending your kids to that half-term coding camp. Both tech titans have been saying what many have been wishing for all along: AI will soon be good enough to obviate the need for low- to medium-level coders.
I’m surprised and slightly annoyed that this has taken so long. Many moons ago, we decided to build an application to manage our translation business. We did this because a) we didn’t like the clunky, glorified Microsoft Access database clones that were available at the time and b) we wanted something customised to our business rather than letting a software company enforce its workflows on us. Thirteen years later and our solid as a rock but simple system needed an overhaul, mainly due to Microsoft ending support for the app’s engine.
We reached out to the original Canadian developer of the app but massive inflation in coder demand and pay meant we could no longer afford him. So, not being a tech company, we hired someone who claimed to know how to do this stuff ‘properly’. This meant the introduction of a proper software development cycle, daily 15 minute ‘stand-ups’ (that actually took two hours), and countless and expensive software subscriptions to help us manage, ironically, the development of our software. To cap it all was the insistence that we develop the new version according to something called ‘agile’ which, as it transpired, just meant we should make things up as we went along.
Three years and six different coders later, we have finally completed our upgrade. What a painful, expensive and overly complicated process it was! The redevelopment of a simple app that originally took one part-time developer 12 months to build ballooned into the IT project from hell that always seemed to teeter on the brink of disaster.
Very long and expensive story short, complicated and expensive software development processes and the enforcement of renting rather than buying software has become a massive problem that companies are desperate to solve. Enter, stage left, AI. Surely, large language models would excel doing what human coders are doing – just cobbling together other people’s code. So it always puzzled me why initially AI wasn’t great at coding (or maths). The good news is that this problem seems to be on the brink of being solved. Just as is the case for mediocre writers, a flurry of text-to-app tools can now fully create a working app and in the last few weeks tools like bolt.new and loveable.ai have added the ‘back-end’ functionality (storing data and managing how users log in). By the end of 2025, anyone or any company will be able to create an app just by prompting AI to build it. Even if you’re not sure how that system should function, you’ll be able to say, “Just give me a HubSpot clone”.
The AI will then pop off to the HubSpot website, check the features, possibly even go to the support site or to Reddit to see what people want to improve and then build a better version and at minimal cost. If you think this is just hype then let me walk you through how we built an enterprise app for £600 in two weeks.
We needed a system to manage our bids for public sector procurement. Our in-house development team were busy finalising the upgrade to our enterprise apps and, frankly, I wanted to do a proof of concept to see how difficult this app-building stuff really was.
I followed this abbreviated process:
Network Hub, 300 Kensal Road, London, W10 5BE, UK
We’ll send you quarterly updates so you can see what we’re working on, what the future holds and how we’re shaping it.