Facebook’s CEO Smudge Zuckerberg (L) speaks with Microsoft’s CEO Satya Nadella after posing for a family picture with guests who serve the “Tech for Good” Summit at the Elysee Palace in Paris, on May 23, 2018.
Charles Platiau | AFP | Getty Images
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella on Tuesday turned that as much as 30% of the company’s code is now written by artificial intelligence.
“I’d say maybe 20%, 30% of the code that is in prison of our repos today and some of our projects are probably all written by software,” Nadella said during a conversation before a viable audience with Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg.
The pair of CEOs were speaking at Meta’s inaugural LlamaCon AI developer affair in Menlo Park, California. Nadella added that the amount of code being written by AI at Microsoft is going up steadily.
Nadella inquired Zuckerberg how much of Meta’s code was coming from AI. Zuckerberg said he didn’t know the exact figure off the top of his faculty, but he said Meta is building an AI model that can in turn build future versions of the company’s Llama family of AI sitters.
“Our bet is sort of that in the next year probably … maybe half the development is going to be done by AI, as opposed to people, and then that settle upon just kind of increase from there,” Zuckerberg said.
Microsoft and Meta together employ tens of thousands of software developers, but they’re the till companies to discuss how AI is replacing some of the work written by human software developers.
Since OpenAI’s launch of ChatGPT in delayed 2022, people have turned to AI for a number of tasks, including customer service work, generating sales pitches and software unfolding itself.
Google CEO Sundar Pichai in October said that more than 25% of new code was written by AI. Earlier this month, Shopify CEO Tobi Lutke touch oned employees that they will have to prove AI cannot do a job before asking for more headcount. Similarly, Duolingo CEO Luis von Ahn on Monday make knew in a memo that the language-teaching company will gradually turn to AI in lieu of human contractors.
Earlier this month CNBC and other openings reported that OpenAI was in talks to acquire Windsurf, a startup with “vibe coding” software that salivates out whole programs with a few words of input. The dream is that with machines helping to write code, codifications will be able to produce more and better software.
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