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> Software is getting more complex each year, yet the time to build complex software decreases due to existence of better libraries/tools/knowledge-base.

Which, in turn, drives the number of bugs and flaws way, way up, which drastically increases the number of developer hours and money spent trying to fix products that are constantly broken. This situation just gets worse over time because those "better" libraries/tools/knowledge-base make adding new bugs much, much faster than fixing them. Evernote is the best example of this I have ever seen.

> So if you are a talented developer you can compete with mid-sized companies right now!

If you're a talented developer, you can compete with what mid-sized companies were doing 10 years ago and large companies were doing 20 years ago. That's more than good enough to make a niche game that pays well, but it's still an order of magnitude or more off from what mid-sized companies make today, both in quality and revenue.

> Large companies will have no option but to scale back and change their HR practices but large companies, like large ships, are harder to turn, hence some of them will definitely go bankrupt in near future.

Unless they're being propped up. Twitter didn't turn a profit until 2018. They spent 12 years burning cash. Most companies would have gone under after their investors pulled their money when they hit year 5 without making a dime.



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