6 clips
All-In Podcast
A speaker explains why Amazon is their top pick for the future, arguing that AI enhancement will allow one person to do three or four jobs simultaneously. This productivity revolution will make companies like Amazon extraordinarily profitable by achieving much more output with dramatically fewer employees.
RRiding Unicorns
Raffi Salama argues that the job market is polarizing into two camps: high-value specialists who are irreplaceable, and AI systems. He warns that low-cost, routine workers are being displaced because AI can perform their tasks more cheaply and efficiently.
The Twenty Minute VC (20VC)
Ariel Cohen acknowledges the impossibility of predicting which jobs AI will eliminate versus create, arguing that despite inevitable ups and downs, the technology will ultimately improve our work and consumption experiences. He takes an optimistic stance on AI's long-term impact on quality of life.
Lenny's Podcast · Boris Cherny
Boris Cherny discusses whether people should still learn programming in the age of AI coding tools like Claude Code. While he believes you currently need to understand the underlying technical layers when using AI agents to code, he predicts that within 1-2 years, coding knowledge won't be necessary at all.
Boris Cherny predicts the traditional software engineer role will evolve or disappear entirely, replaced by broader 'builder' roles or a world where everyone becomes a product manager who codes. This shift reflects how AI is fundamentally changing the nature of technical work and organizational structures.
Kenneth Auchenberg explores the absurdity of AI saturation in everyday interactions, painting a picture where AI agents prep interviewees while AI note-takers record and AI systems score the conversation. He questions whether we're heading toward a world where human-to-human communication becomes entirely mediated by artificial intelligence.