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There has been a lot of conversation about what AI might take away from technical work. There has been less discussion about what it might quietly hand back to individuals. This reflection looks at a different possibility: what if small, personal tools become easier to create than to purchase? Not as a grand shift in the economy, but as a practical change in how everyday problems get solved. It considers how expectations around software, ownership, and dependence on large platforms may be changing in subtle ways.
By Brant SteenThere has been a lot of conversation about what AI might take away from technical work. There has been less discussion about what it might quietly hand back to individuals. This reflection looks at a different possibility: what if small, personal tools become easier to create than to purchase? Not as a grand shift in the economy, but as a practical change in how everyday problems get solved. It considers how expectations around software, ownership, and dependence on large platforms may be changing in subtle ways.