I get a feeling you don't have much experience as a developer. Typically internal tooling isn't something that is budgeted and replacing other tasks, it's something that happens alongside main duties.
Zoom, GMeet and Outlook aren't app builder or business automation applications. In enterprise settings those tools in the Microsoft offering are quite popular, which I assume is the reason you don't mention those.
Typically Selenium is used together with tooling that records user behaviour and/or generates configuration automatically based on some data source. Could you elaborate on why you think this is "overcomplicated"?
I do have lots of experience writing code:
JavaScript, React, PHP, Python, Shell Scripts, Apple Scripts and a bit of Java.
I'd say my favourite one is Python.
But our discussion shouldn't be about what I think vs. what you think.
In the article, I'm mostly presenting the facts and the direction in which the market is moving, based on research from independent sources.
If you had news articles like this:
UIPath is closing down, because no company wants to do low-code automation
Airtable is not expanding, because companies don't want to build apps with their platform
I would have said that your opinion is correct.
If you have any data or valid resources to back up your claims, that would make the discussion more interesting.
You'd like me to explain why using Selenium leads to overcomplications?
I get a feeling you don't have much experience as a developer. Typically internal tooling isn't something that is budgeted and replacing other tasks, it's something that happens alongside main duties.
Zoom, GMeet and Outlook aren't app builder or business automation applications. In enterprise settings those tools in the Microsoft offering are quite popular, which I assume is the reason you don't mention those.
Typically Selenium is used together with tooling that records user behaviour and/or generates configuration automatically based on some data source. Could you elaborate on why you think this is "overcomplicated"?
Your assumption is incorrect.
I do have lots of experience writing code:
JavaScript, React, PHP, Python, Shell Scripts, Apple Scripts and a bit of Java.
I'd say my favourite one is Python.
But our discussion shouldn't be about what I think vs. what you think.
In the article, I'm mostly presenting the facts and the direction in which the market is moving, based on research from independent sources.
If you had news articles like this:
UIPath is closing down, because no company wants to do low-code automation
Airtable is not expanding, because companies don't want to build apps with their platform
I would have said that your opinion is correct.
If you have any data or valid resources to back up your claims, that would make the discussion more interesting.
You'd like me to explain why using Selenium leads to overcomplications?
I actually made a video about that last year:
youtube.com/watch?v=uJSC_YwXYZw
Junior developers worry about syntax and languages, experienced developers worry about data structures.
I'd appreciate if you linked a transcript instead.