Yep, sure, you can glue and duck tape a cool demo in two hours. Somehow that doesn't seem to translate to actually building and maintaining real products, where the demand for developer time seems virtually infinite, and everything ends up released in a buggy alpha tier state that never gets fully fixed to a mature state.
And somehow my experience using computers & software hasn't gotten dramatically better in the past two decades. Most of the improvement can be attributed to long term hard work (software that I used 20 years ago is today easier to configure and/or has been replaced by something that is easier to configure, and it's not because they rewrote it by throwing some glue and libraries at python over a weekend) or improvements in hardware.
And somehow my experience using computers & software hasn't gotten dramatically better in the past two decades. Most of the improvement can be attributed to long term hard work (software that I used 20 years ago is today easier to configure and/or has been replaced by something that is easier to configure, and it's not because they rewrote it by throwing some glue and libraries at python over a weekend) or improvements in hardware.