AI doesn't mean your developers are obsolete - if anything you're probably going to need bigger teams
Briefly

AI doesn't mean your developers are obsolete - if anything you're probably going to need bigger teams
"New research from GitLab shows a steep increase in the use of the technology across the profession, with 99% currently using - or planning to use - AI across the software development lifecycle. Similarly, more than half (57%) of devs now use more than five tools for software development. This influx of AI tools is transforming the profession, with 75% revealing the technology will "significantly change" their roles within the next five years."
"It's way too easy to use, which basically means that most enterprises who are conscious about compliance, security, costs, they find themselves in a situation where the adoption of these new tools becomes extremely complex,"
"They start having issues from a compliance standpoint and from a security standpoint, because the data path of information becomes unclear, and also from a cost perspective, it becomes a little bit more challenging."
AI adoption in software development has surged, with 99% of developers using or planning to use AI across the software development lifecycle. Over half of developers now use more than five development tools, and 75% expect AI to significantly change their roles within five years. Organizations face rising concerns about security, compliance, and skills, creating a paradox where easy tool adoption complicates governance, data paths, and costs. Two-thirds report AI makes compliance management more challenging. Evolving platform engineering that integrates AI and cross-team collaboration is presented as a solution to manage complexity and scale teams.
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