As a software developer myself, I see nothing wrong with that. I've spent a lot of years tediously grinding out code that does some essential but pretty boring stuff. Now I just get the AI to do the grinding. These days it does an amazingly good job with little effort on my part, and I'm getting better results with fewer prompts than just a few months ago. The improvements over the past year have been incredible.
I do understand people's concerns about the skill pipeline though. I know what components I want the AI to build, how they should hook together, how they should be tested, etc. That's mainly because I used to have to do it all by hand. But I think as time passes even the architectural details of many applications will become boilerplate that the AI can easily handle. Project managers will define requirements, the code will be generated quickly for review, there can be multiple iterations over a few days if needed. The time from idea to product will be vastly compressed.
As the Times article says, “The blessing and the curse is that now everyone inside your company becomes a coder”. That ain't such a bad thing in my opinion.