A kid I mentor told me about Budibase. He is a strong developer so I was intrigued that he would gravitate towards low-code but his rationale makes sense. B said, there is development work that is interesting and can be a passion project. Then there is stuff you do to earn a buck -mundane, enterprise stuff re-solving problems that have been solved many times before. There is nothing to particularly learn or gain from such experience for a real programmer.
So stuff like Budibase fills a very useful gap for folks just like him. Now if someone like me wanted to play and around and make stuff, this could be an option - it would free me from needing developers to bring a concept to reality. So the solution was addressing a pretty diverse set of personas from hobbyist to professional with varying degrees of technology experience.
A long time fan of the low-code movement, it's good to see the fresh crop of solutions in this space and unlike the previous waves, this time it seems to be bringing the coders into the fold as well. In large part this is driven by migration of data and applications to cloud. There is now a chance to reset and modernize everything and bring in a larger pool of talent in shaping how technology will be used to run business on cloud. If the low-code platform is designed right, it can help that pool of talent to start producing value without having to first learn how hundreds of cloud services talk to each other.
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