>>106515810
I've been thinking a lot about this old Twilight Zone episode that depicted future programmers as just people with microphones that speak to the machines.
There was also a time when compilers were looked down. They saved time by letting you write in C, but often times the result was not performant, didn't output valid Assembler, and you ended up having to write your own anyway. Nowadays, almost no one has to write hand rolled Assembler anymore, and attempting to do so outside a few niches would result in worse code than what the compiler is capable of writing.
The technology is still new. I'm sure the transition to higher-order knowledge work is inevitable, but it's probably still decades away.