Matt Egan
Global Content and Editorial Director

Why we need human developers

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Oct 6, 20254 mins

Your weekly round-up of the questions asked by readers of CIO, Computerworld, CSO, InfoWorld, and Network World explains why humans remain crucial to critical software projects; how AI investments are being funded by layoffs; and why AI infrastructure is so expensive.

Developer coding in front of computer
Credit: Gorodenkoff / Shutterstock

Why human developers are crucial for software projects 

This week, we are probing the secondary impacts of the age of AI, what it means for skilled human practitioners, and the infrastructure needed to support AI projects.  

Vibe coding is the next evolutionary step in the way generative AI (genAI) is affecting coding and the software development lifecycle. AI-assisted development lets a developer or less technical builder develop full-stack applications using an iterative series of AI prompts to establish and then improve an applicationโ€™s design. 

Recently, InfoWorld had tech leaders weigh in on vibe coding: What it is, what itโ€™s not, and how to use it safely in production software.  

The idea of AI-assisted work is somewhat controversial for humans. Readers of InfoWorld wanted to know where people remain critical. Smart Answers parsed our decades of human reporting to investigate.  

The verdict? Human developers are crucial for critical software projects because AI, while capable of generating code, lacks understanding and is prone to hallucinations. Human engineers are essential for validating, testing, and monitoring AI-generated outputs to prevent errors and ensure reliability, especially in high-stakes environments in which software controls critical systems.  

Developers also provide the necessary organizational context that AI systems lack, which is vital for effective and efficient project development. 

Find out: Why are human developers still crucial for critical software projects? 

How layoffs are funding AI projects   

We live in a time of skills gaps and large-scale unemployment of technology professionals. AI is having an impact. Last week we learned that product changes are likely as Oracle plans an estimated 10,000 more layoffs by the end of the year.  

Why is this happening? Readers of CIO.com have their suspicions and asked Smart Answers to confirm that this is a cost-saving exercise intended to support investment in AI. 

The answer is equivocal: Smart Answers says Oracleโ€™s recent layoffs could be interpreted as an effort to fund its significant investments in artificial intelligence projects. And some analysts suggest that the development of agentic AI could enable these layoffs by allowing customers to customize applications, potentially reducing the need for Oracleโ€™s workforce in app expansion. 

Find out: Why are Oracleโ€™s recent layoffs funding AI projects? 

Why AI data centers are so expensive 

Less equivocal is the affect of AI on the cost of infrastructure. Network World reported that Oracle is set to spend $40 billion on Nvidia chips for an OpenAI data center in Texasl. The move signals OpenAIโ€™s break from Microsoft exclusivity, and showcases how enterprise AI infrastructure costs are surging to unprecedented levels. 

Readers wanted to understand why that is. Smart Answers says it is the high price of specialized hardware, such as GPUs and ultra-high-speed networking components, combined with the additional power draw needed to run it. This, in turn, impacts the costs of cooling. 

Find out What makes AI data centers expensive? 

About Smart Answers 

Smart Answers is an AI-based chatbot tool designed to help you discover content, answer questions, and go deep on the topics that matter to you. Each week we send you the three most popular questions asked by our readers, and the answers Smart Answers provides. 

Developed in partnership with Miso.ai, Smart Answers draws only on editorial content from our network of trusted media brandsโ€”CIO, Computerworld, CSO, InfoWorld, and Network Worldโ€”and was trained on questions that a savvy enterprise IT audience would ask. The result is a fast, efficient way for you to get more value from our content. 

Matt Egan
Global Content and Editorial Director

Matt Egan is Global Content and Editorial Director of Foundry's enterprise sites. He has worked for the world's leading technology brands - CIO, Computerworld, CSO, InfoWorld and Network World - since 2003. A passionate technology fan who writes on subjects as diverse as AI, internet security, and IT leadership, in his spare time Matt enjoys playing soccer (badly) and singing in a band (also badly).

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