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AI May Expand Software Creation the Way the iPhone Democratized Photography

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A new opinion piece on DEV Community argues that AI is poised to do for software what the iPhone did for photography — radically democratizing who can create it. Just as smartphone cameras drove a 25x surge in global photo-taking without eliminating professional photographers, the author suggests AI will expand the pool of software creators from 40 million engineers to potentially a billion. The piece predicts that much of tomorrow's software will be hyper-personalized, single-user, and disposable — built to solve an immediate problem and discarded rather than maintained. The author invokes Jevons Paradox to argue that making software creation cheaper will increase overall demand rather than shrink the industry. In this projected landscape, the author contends that ideas, taste, and distribution — not coding skill — will become the defining competitive advantages.

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