On a December night in 2024, an AI model began writing code that was
better than most human programmers could produce. Within hours, engineers
across the world were staring at their screens, confronting a question
none of them were prepared for: What am I for?
THE LAST PROGRAMMER is a sweeping, deeply reported work of
narrative nonfiction that follows five people across five continents as
they navigate the most dramatic disruption in the history of the
technology profession.
From a junior developer in Lagos locked out of the career she trained
for, to a sixty-seven-year-old veteran in Singapore who may be the last
person alive who understands the code that runs the world's banks-
Francesco Malila captures the human drama of an industry in freefall
with the intimacy of a novel and the rigor of an economic treatise.
Drawing on more than two hundred interviews across fourteen
countries, Malila-himself a programmer of nearly twenty years-traces
how AI coding tools went from novelty to necessity in less than three
years, gutting the apprenticeship pipeline, enabling a florist to build
her own software in a weekend, and forcing an entire generation to
reckon with the automation of their identity.
Inside you'll discover:
Part economic history, part reportage, part meditation on craft and
obsolescence, THE LAST PROGRAMMER asks the questions that every
knowledge worker will soon face: What happens when the machines get
good enough? What do we owe the people displaced by progress? And what
remains of us when the thing that defined us is taken away?
Essential reading for anyone who writes code, manages people who
write code, or lives in a world built by code-which is to say,
everyone.