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No, that's not what it means at all even if just doing it purely in math terms. Really it is just a reasonable amount to cap at to stop the long tail of super spenders (tokenmaxxers). You could also call it "the amount of AI spend after which Uber has decided there is diminishing returns for the average engineer".
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I'm sure if a dev can show useful results at 1k they won't have trouble getting permission for a higher cap as well.
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It's not so simple to determine and generalize how much value AI adds. It's going to be different on a per-company basis and a per-engineer basis. It's also affected by the competitive market place and how many other companies are using AI for their engineers.

For example, what if you're a tiny startup and you're considering whether to hire an extra engineer or do all the coding yourself. I would estimate that AI is worth far more than $18,000 a year in that situation where you might reasonably decide to put off hiring an engineer.

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I find it really doubtful anyone has managed to quantify that in any meaningful way. Seems like mostly an arbitrary number. Also the article does claim that's its actual several times more than 18k if you are fine with using Codex, Cursor or etc. when you Claude tokens run out.
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Their initial budget for determining how much value AI adds is $18,000 per engineer.
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Not really. There are clearly diminishing marginal returns, so it's likely that the first $2,400/engineer/year adds >>$2,400 of value, even if 18,001st $/engineer/year adds <$1 of value.
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It means Uber thinks they can sustain that level of expense. Whether engineers at Uber are representative of the rest of the work force is an easily debatable question.
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It's among a wave of fresh "non-insane" takes on AI in the enterprise. Maybe we can reel things in to a sustainable level before a giant bubble bursts.
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