One thing that I've noticed is that AI has made it even more abundantly obvious that the low IQs of middle-managers are the main problem.
They have a great faith in AI (which is understandable), but they're constantly realising that:
a) they don't understand any of the problems enough to even being prompting for a solution
b) the AI can explain our code but the manager still won't understand
c) the AI can rephrase our explanations and they still won't understand.
Traditionally middle-managers probably consoled themselves with the idea that the nerds can't communicate well and coding is a dumb arcane discipline anyway. But now that their machine god isn't doing a better job than we are of ELI5ing it, I think even they're starting to doubt themselves.
They have a great faith in AI (which is understandable), but they're constantly realising that:
a) they don't understand any of the problems enough to even being prompting for a solution
b) the AI can explain our code but the manager still won't understand
c) the AI can rephrase our explanations and they still won't understand.
Traditionally middle-managers probably consoled themselves with the idea that the nerds can't communicate well and coding is a dumb arcane discipline anyway. But now that their machine god isn't doing a better job than we are of ELI5ing it, I think even they're starting to doubt themselves.