> Smaller companies will have departments that distill larger models into something more specifically manageable and useful for them.
In order to do that they'd have to make a concrete business case to justify the headcount and compute costs. They'd be facing the same fundamental economic problems Anthropic, OpenAI, MSFT, etc are facing just at a department level instead of a megacorp level. I hope they try it, sunlight is the best disinfectant.
However, when the pressure is turned up and people have to actually show results--and, like, be accountable--instead of just buying a subscription and externalizing the accountability, I don't think we'll see so much enthusiasm about AI coding. Whether or not an engineer is actually more or less productive with AI (not merely whether they feel more productive) will begin to matter a lot more. I don't see how people continue using AI in this hypothetical small company under those adverse conditions.