He's saying you should be writing up complex, highly detailed specs for the LLM to turn into code, stressing that it's critical to work in a self-contained and "textually representable" problem domain. This is not one-shotting complete products from a vague prompt. You're still going to need software architects, and they'll still be doing much the same work. Turning fully-specified design into code has never been a "10x" task, it was always regarded as a relatively straightforward, if often tricky part of the job. And the way he worked with Redis makes it clear that you can't take what the AI delivers at face value, either: you'll have to go through it yourself, and that will take time and effort.
Also his whole blog is about how, in order to do a task, he would need to spec it properly, then do "code inpainting" with the LLM, then fix all the issues that he could spot only because he's a senior, then repeat, etc
Did you read it?