It's like WYSIWYG web page tools. It will increase accessibility to APIs for less technically inclined people, but for a technical person trying to make a sophisticated product, it'll just get in their way.<p>The same can be said for higher level vs lower level languages.<p>We're constantly creating new abstractions for our tooling to make the computers do what we want to do, but we've never gotten rid of the need for people to get underneath that tooling and get down a layer or two or three of abstraction.<p>My expectation is the pattern repeats, way more people get into this game, wages for people higher in the stack go down as their skillset gets democratized (e.g., that guy in the late 90s who knew HTML), and those that know how to peak under the covers become less needed numerically, but more essential when the rubber meets the road.