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> "Software is eating the world", a great intuition by a guy who sadly totally lost the plot later

I searched for any reference to Marc in the second link and didn't find it. I didn't read the NYT article (I assume there's a paywall), but the Blankenhorn one that did respond to him was just a political screed ranting about things like "trickle-down economics" (while Marc's essay didn't mention taxes at all but did endorse a social welfare system).

> THIS would be an industry of more numerous suppliers who really want and care to compete more strongly for customers?

https://www.econlib.org/john-madden-on-how-competition-among-small-numbers-is-still-very-competitive/

> "[if] software is a mess it is because [its developers]] made it a mess, and it’ll only get and STAY clean if they clean it."

Similarly, a human will only stay clean if they make absolutely sure not to accumulate any uncleanliness on them. But of course we are going to get dirty over time, necessitating submersion in water (assuming you don't rely on sponge-bathing). But eventually the human organism itself will be unable to go on (as our lifespan isn't nearly as long as, say, trees), and it is left to that individual's descendants to carry on that legacy. Robin's views on "rot" point to not only organisms dying, but also organizations and even polities. Lasting forever is just not something you can expect.

> plus saner software regulations

There is no reason to expect that to arrive alongside shrinking populations.

> It would be great if monopolies" were a future concern, not the situation we are in now.

Nope. If there is any competitor, it's not a monopoly.

> completely ignore, as it seems the case here, the existence and potential, especially in "declining" scenarios, of the Free/Open Source Software management model

Lots of such software is written by employees of companies like RedHat, which can survive in a world of growing economies & population, but might not in a world of decline.

> finally sustainable, at much smaller costs, by Universities

Universities have also depended on population growth to be viable.

> two quickly growing, but much overhyped class of "software developers": [...] the millions of adult workers left jobless by automation and AI

Hanson has written about how we aren't seeing such unemployment.

https://www.overcomingbias.com/p/no-recent-automation-revolutionhtml

Instead he sees that happening well in the future as computers actually become capable of doing most human jobs.

> Any moron can look and do great with ever expanding money and other resources at hand. It's when constraints increase that real (as in "really meaningful and game-changing") innovation emerges.

I deny that innovation isn't "real" merely because it was accomplished via an effort costing lots of money rather than putting a genius in charge. Did the Manhattan Project not innovate because it cost a lot of money and Leslie Groves was not as smart as the people under him?

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