Yes, the point I was making (and as you point out, have been making for the last quarter century) is that we err when not making this realization -- and indeed, I think the linked piece is exactly backwards because it doesn't understand this. That is, the piece views a world of LLM-authored/-assisted software as "industrialized" when I view it as the opposite of this: because software costs nothing to replicate (because the blueprints are the machine!), pre-LLM ("handcrafted") software is already tautologically industrialized. Lowering the barrier to entry of software with LLMs serves to allow for more bespoke software -- and it is, if anything, a kind of machine-assisted de-industrialization of software.
> Lowering the barrier to entry of software with LLMs serves to allow for more bespoke software -- and it is, if anything, a kind of machine-assisted de-industrialization of software.
Instead of people downloading / purchasing the same bits for a particular piece of software which is cookie cutter like a two-piece from Men's Suite Warehouse, we can ask LLM for custom bit of code: everyone getting a garment from Savile Row.