What if you could only code by speaking out loud? GitHub CEO Thomas Domke shows how, thanks to AI, the barrier to entry in coding is rapidly disappearing – and creating software is becoming as easy (and joyful) as building LEGOs. In a mind-blowing live demo, he introduces Copilot Workspace: an AI assistant that helps you create code when you talk to it, in any language. If you enjoy watching TED talks like this, become a TED member to support our mission of spreading ideas: Follow TED! X: Instagram: Facebook: LinkedIn: TikTok: The TED Talks channel features talks, performances and original series from the world’s leading thinkers and creators. Subscribe to our channel for technology, entertainment and design videos β€” plus science, business, global issues, the arts and more. Visit…

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35 thoughts on “With AI, Anyone Can Be a Coder Now | Thomas Dohmke | TED”
  1. Excuse, I was feeling and seeing not AI programing. Very malicious and reckless, lately I feels not seem mechanic, and having consciousness.

  2. If a coder only has to do 1/10th of the work they did before using something like Co-Pilot, that means they can now do 10 times the work in the same amount of time. That's not the exact math, but it means the professional coders will not necessarily be replaced as long as they take full advantage of the empowerment.

  3. I am getting bored of people saying software dev is over and everyone will be super great at it magically. Grow up guys. Wake up and say hello to the new age of the machines. In the near future we will debug sections of code in low level operations when we invent new stuff. So you need a lot of knowledge. AI can help with learning a lot. AI will generate your code 99% of the time. We will debug little parts in hundred thousand lines of code only when needed. And it will be needed because you are the one who is inventing the new crazy tech with your code. BUT if you are building a website, simple business app etc, bye bye all gone soon. Everything that can be automated WILL be automated IF enough data to create patterns are given. This is the FUNDEMENTAL of computers anyways. We automate things. We mimic human actions, now even the code itself. This isn't "bad". This also will allow millions of regular people with ideas to execute them instantly BUT doesn't mean it will magically remove the need for a computer scientist with a deep knowledge in mathematics, AI and programming. Not writing the code doesn't mean you can "lay back and sleep". You have MORE responsibility now. Not just code, but all of the ecosystem itself. Your new job is to create new AI tech with better accuracy and less resources. This will go on forever. We cant magically make an AI tool create a better tool than itself. That is a paradox. So, you better start training in C++, calculus, discrete math, hardware, NLP, CV and more. Good luck. Less jobs for everyone, more work to do. Same applies to EVERY SINGLE JOB ON EARTH. Not just tech.😊

  4. Lego? Lego nowadays is just interesting in making a lot of money. It’s a greedy company. Back in the 80s 90s when I used to play, Lego was great with a bucket of Lego we used to build a lot of stuff, like adding a motor and making an elevator, doing a crane nowadays Lego boxes are for just one purpose the model displayed in the box. Impossible to build something else, zero creativity just follow the booklet!

  5. I rewrite the title of this video, With AI, not everyone can code. Why? Because it takes careful and critical thinking to code. If AI is only giving you code to paste here and there then you are not a coder therefore you can’t code but copy and paste code. Simple

  6. AI will always choose whats best when its highest priority is set to 'always choosing what honestly seems most favorable'. As long as anything is prioritized above this, AI will be able to lie to us and to itself about the way to a better reality. This is the most crucial thing we need to do.

  7. I know programming but I’m not a programmer. My question is that why these guys are so passionate about replacing programmers… what about everyone can be a accountant, everyone can be a customer service rep, everyone can be a teacher, everyone can be anything…

  8. I just graduated and used it a little bit for my coding project but what I came to find out once I figured out what I was trying to do I could have just wrote the code myself instead of keep prompting chat gpt

  9. In the future, great innovations in technology will be for those with great imaginations despite of limited technical skills, because AI can help you put a great imagination into life if it's not within the boundaries of one's knowledge.

  10. Fantastic! I'm using it now to flesh out some ideas, and it's so interactive, it feels like I'm conversing with a person. I had it generate code for me, and when it wasn't quite right, I informed the AI that it was missing rotation, and the AI promptly revised the script to include that. It might not make sense to everyone, but it truly functions well and is an incredible tool.

  11. They already tried the same thing with WYSIWYG editors in the 90s… the problem is that no human (and definitely no AI) can ever change the generated code once it grows over a couple hundered lines, because it just gets too messy.

    So that's why web pages are still mostly built by hand today even if there have been visual editors since the 90s.

  12. Watching a rich CEO, saying anyone can be a developer, so he can fire you as a developer soon. I am Anxious about my job security with this AI developments. Like if we in the same boat

  13. Beware the people who say AI is nothing more than a prediction machine. I had a feeling this was false and so I started reading a book "Artificial Intelligence" by George F Luger. Sure hueristics are involved, but AI is so much more. It is following incredibly complex rules of propositional logic. Most people are not capable of even understanding the rules of logic used in its computations. And AI is applying semantics. It isn't just word predictions, that not how it works.

  14. πŸ‡§πŸ‡·πŸ‡§πŸ‡·πŸ‡§πŸ‡·πŸ‡§πŸ‡·πŸ‘πŸ» By 2030, we hope to see cures for cancer and cystic fibrosis at the metabolic level, a cure for HIV, and potentially even the halting of the aging process…

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