I agree. I'm a big fan/proponent of AI assisted development (though nowhere near your amount of experience with it). And I think that 2x-10x speed up can be true, depending on what you mean exactly and what your task is exactly.
This article thinks that most people who say 10x productivity are claiming 10x speedup on end-to-end delivering features. If that's indeed what someone is saying, they're most of the time quite simply wrong (or lying).
But I think some people (like me) aren't claiming that. Of course the end to end product process includes a lot more work than just the pure coding aspect, and indeed none of those other parts are getting a 10x speedup right now.
That said, there are a few cases where this 10x end-to-end is possible. E.g. when working alone, especially on new things but not only - you're skipping a lot of this overhead. That's why smaller teams, even solo teams, are suddenly super interesting - because they are getting a bigger speedup comparatively speaking, and possibly enough of one to be able to rival larger teams.
Programmers are notoriously bad about making estimates. Sure it sped something up 10x, but did you consider those 10 tries using AI that didn't pan out? You're not even breaking even, you are losing time.
This article thinks that most people who say 10x productivity are claiming 10x speedup on end-to-end delivering features. If that's indeed what someone is saying, they're most of the time quite simply wrong (or lying).
But I think some people (like me) aren't claiming that. Of course the end to end product process includes a lot more work than just the pure coding aspect, and indeed none of those other parts are getting a 10x speedup right now.
That said, there are a few cases where this 10x end-to-end is possible. E.g. when working alone, especially on new things but not only - you're skipping a lot of this overhead. That's why smaller teams, even solo teams, are suddenly super interesting - because they are getting a bigger speedup comparatively speaking, and possibly enough of one to be able to rival larger teams.