Amazon Web Services CEO Matt Garman is not worried that AI is going to replace him as CEO; says: May be I would have been worried if …
Amazon Web Services (AWS) CEO Matt Garman has a clear message for anyone wondering if artificial intelligence (AI) is coming for the top office. In a recent interview with The Wall Street Journal, Garman was asked directly if he feared being replaced as the head of Amazon’s massive cloud division by an AI model, his reply: he isn't losing sleep over it, provided he keeps using the technology himself.
“If I wasn't using AI, I would maybe be worried that I'd be replaced, probably by another person, not the AI,” Garman responded. He emphasized that the real threat to professionals isn’t the technology itself, but competitors who know how to use it better.
“I think everybody should be really leaning in and understanding how they can leverage AI to be more efficient and effective at the job that they do and increase the output for their company and their customers,” he added.
The value of basic, repetitive coding is falling rapidly because automated tools can handle it instantly.
“If the skill set that you really hang on to is your ability to write a good line of Java code… that probably is going to be a less valuable skill going forward,” Garman noted. However, he painted an optimistic picture for developers willing to adapt, adding, “We are going to need tons and tons of software developers who know how to build systems, who know how to think about solving problems for customers.”
The executive's comments arrive during a transition period for Amazon. Over the past six months, the tech giant executed two waves of layoffs wherein it cut 14,000 corporate positions in October and an additional 16,000 in January essentially to flatten the management layers and eliminate bureaucracy.
At the same time, the company poured nearly $100 billion into building out generative AI data centres and infrastructure.
Garman also previously pointed out that the company’s recruitment remains steady despite the restructuring. Amazon is currently on track to bring in 11,000 software development engineer interns and entry-level, full-time hires globally.
“I can tell you we are hiring just as many software developers as we ever had inside of Amazon. And in fact, I see the demand for that really accelerating,” Garman stated.
According to Garman, day-to-day work at AWS is shifting away from isolated coding tasks toward high-level system architecture. Instead of evaluating candidates based on their speed at syntax editing, Amazon is prioritising engineers who can comprehend complex consumer business demands, design end-to-end cloud applications, and integrate multi-layered web services.
“I think everybody should be really leaning in and understanding how they can leverage AI to be more efficient and effective at the job that they do and increase the output for their company and their customers,” he added.
Garman says the skills needed in the industry are changing
Garman’s perspective comes amid an often-debated stance on the future of the software engineering workforce amid the rise of AI. He reiterated that while generative AI is not going to completely eliminate developer jobs, it is permanently rewriting the description of what a programmer does.The value of basic, repetitive coding is falling rapidly because automated tools can handle it instantly.
“If the skill set that you really hang on to is your ability to write a good line of Java code… that probably is going to be a less valuable skill going forward,” Garman noted. However, he painted an optimistic picture for developers willing to adapt, adding, “We are going to need tons and tons of software developers who know how to build systems, who know how to think about solving problems for customers.”
The executive's comments arrive during a transition period for Amazon. Over the past six months, the tech giant executed two waves of layoffs wherein it cut 14,000 corporate positions in October and an additional 16,000 in January essentially to flatten the management layers and eliminate bureaucracy.
Garman also previously pointed out that the company’s recruitment remains steady despite the restructuring. Amazon is currently on track to bring in 11,000 software development engineer interns and entry-level, full-time hires globally.
“I can tell you we are hiring just as many software developers as we ever had inside of Amazon. And in fact, I see the demand for that really accelerating,” Garman stated.
According to Garman, day-to-day work at AWS is shifting away from isolated coding tasks toward high-level system architecture. Instead of evaluating candidates based on their speed at syntax editing, Amazon is prioritising engineers who can comprehend complex consumer business demands, design end-to-end cloud applications, and integrate multi-layered web services.
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2 days ago
Why should a millionaire/ billionaire be worried if he loses his job? Is he or his family going to go hungry like ours?...Read More
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