There seem to still be a lot of people who look at results like this and evaluate them purely based on the current state. I don't know how you can look at this and not realize that it represents a huge improvement over just a few months ago, there have been continuous improvements for many years now, and there is no reason to believe progress is stopping here. If you project out just one year, even assuming progress stops after that, the implications are staggering.
i have to admit, even if model and tooling progress stopped dead today the world of software development has forever changed and will never go back.
Every S-curve looks like an exponential until you hit the bend.
Yea the software engineering profession is over, even if all improvements stop now.
The improvements in tool use and agentic loops have been fast and furious lately, delivering great results. The model growth itself is feeling more "slow and linear" lately, but what you can do with models as part of an overall system has been increasing in growth rate and that has been delivering a lot of value. It matters less if the model natively can keep infinite context or figure things out on its own in one shot so long as it can orchestrate external tools to achieve that over time.