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Business Insider5 days ago
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Claude Code creator says 22-year-old CS grads should found startups: 'It's the golden age'

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Boris Cherny, creator of Claude Code, says 22-year-old CS grads should start startups, calling it 'the golden age' due to AI tools. He notes that at Y Combinator, half of founders let Claude Code write 100% of their code.

Claude Code creator says 22-year-old CS grads should found startups: 'It's the golden age'
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The Big Picture

Boris Cherny, the creator of Anthropic's Claude Code, encouraged recent computer science graduates to pursue entrepreneurship, stating that there has 'never been a better time in history' to start a startup. Speaking on the 'Platformer' podcast, Cherny argued that AI tools like Claude Code enable founders to build and scale companies more efficiently than ever before. He cited a recent Y Combinator event where half of the founders reported letting Claude Code write 100% of their code, with only one founder out of hundreds not using it at all. Cherny's advice aligns with a broader tech trend, as OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has also noted that deep user understanding is now as important as technical talent. Cherny predicted that while the title of 'engineer' may change, the number of people writing code or using agents to write code will increase 100-fold.

Why It Matters

This signals a fundamental shift in startup formation: AI coding agents are lowering the technical barrier to entry, enabling non-coders and small teams to build software at unprecedented speed. For 22-year-old CS grads, the advice to found startups rather than take traditional jobs reflects a new reality where technical talent is no longer the primary bottleneck—deep user understanding and entrepreneurial drive are becoming the key differentiators.

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Boris Cherny talks at San Francisco's Code with Claude developer conference.
Boris Cherny talks at San Francisco
Boris Cherny, the creator of Claude Code.

Anthropic

  • The creator of Claude Code encouraged recent CS graduates to embrace entrepreneurship.
  • Boris Cherny said there has "never been a better time in history" to start a startup.
  • Cherny said a recent talk with founders illustrated their use of tools like Claude Code.

Anthropic's Boris Cherny has a simple message for the 22-year-old computer science graduates looking to figure out what's next.

"If you want to work at a company, you can totally still do that — there are entry-level jobs, there's a lot you can do," Cherny told tech journalist Casey Newton during a recent episode of Newton's "Platformer" podcast. "But if you're at all entrepreneurial, go start a startup."

Thanks to AI tools like Claude Code, which Cherny created, entrepreneurs can build and scale their companies like never before.

"There has never been a better time in history to do it; it's the golden age," he said. "You and your agents can build a giant company."

Cherny told Newton that he had recently spoken with the latest batch of founders at Y Combinator, the famed Silicon Valley incubator once led by OpenAI CEO Sam Altman. Instead of asking founders whether they used Claude Code, Cherny said he asked for a show of hands of how many founders let Claude Code write "100% of their code."

"These are the most cutting-edge startups — usually a few people each — and half the hands went up," he said.

In contrast, Cherny said, when he asked the same group how many of them don't have the model write any of their code, "out of a couple hundred people, one hand went up."

"Everyone else was somewhere between 50% and 100%," he said. "So coding is getting solved for a bigger and bigger percentage of the code we write."

Cherny's broad advice aligns with the growing chorus in tech, which sees the rise of AI, especially coding agents, as offering unprecedented opportunities for the next generation of startups.

"For a long time, I think the most important ingredient that I looked for — YC looked for, that kind of this part of our industry looked for on a founding team — was technical talent," Altman said recently. "And that's still very important, but now people who just really deeply understand their users and can't code at all. I want to fund those people."

As for the future of software engineering, Cherny said, while the title of engineer may change, the broad work of people writing code or using agents to write code will not.

"I don't think we're going to call them engineers," he said. "But if we talk about people writing code or using agents to write code, I think there will be 100 times more of them than there are today. That's my prediction."

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