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> the barrier for entry was incredibly high

Hmm, for some values of "incredibly".

John Carmack, a juvenile delinquent, dropped out of university and went on career programming, soon upending the game industry.

Linus Torvalds released Linux while being a university student, five years before obtaining a master's degree.

Vitalik Buterin dropped out of university and created Etherium, funded by a grant from Thiel foundation. Whatever you may say about cryptocurrencies, Etherium is a nontrivial piece of software, showing remarkable longevity in the fast-moving field.

None of them had a ton of formal qualifications. None of them had to obtain a license. They could just sit at a computer, write great software, and release it to the world, changing the world quite much.

What they all have is a passion for (and resulting deep knowledge of) computers, mathematics, logic, plus independent thinking, and, well, not asking for permission.

This is what a low barrier to entry plus universal availability of powerful tools (computers, compliers, etc), and books leads to.

(High barriers bring very different results: look now many small aircraft still fly with engines designed in 1950s, burning leaded avgas. A worthy challenger still fails to step over the sky-high barrier.)



For Carmack and Torvalds, I’d argue the barrier to entry was still very high at that time. Both had the opportunity to attend university, which in itself gave them access to people and resources they otherwise wouldn’t have had. Additionally, they had access to personal computers when almost the entire world did not, along with the time and resources to focus on their interests. They were extremely fortunate to have that kind of privilege.

As for Buterin, I have no idea who they are, so I can’t speak to them.




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