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WASHINGTON - MARCH 04: Venture capitalist and founder of Khosla Ventures and Sun Microsystems Vinod ... More Khosla addresses a plenary session of the 2008 Washington International Renewable Energy Conference March 4, 2008 in Washington, DC. During the conference, which is sponsored by the U.S. government, the American Council on Renewable Energy called on the U.S. Congress to renew an existing federal tax credit for renewable-energy projects that is set to expire at the end of 2008. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)
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The future, according to legendary venture capitalist Vinod Khosla, isn't a distant horizon we're slowly approaching—it's a landscape being actively sculpted by breakthrough technologies that will fundamentally transform how we live and work. From his early pioneering days co-founding Sun Microsystems to his current multi-billion dollar bets at Khosla Ventures, he has consistently demonstrated an uncanny ability to see around technological corners.
In a recent wide-ranging discussion with entrepreneur Peter H. Diamandis at the AbundanceSummit 2025, Khosla outlined his vision for the next decade—one where artificial intelligence eliminates traditional programming, bipedal robots outnumber cars, and fusion energy powers our cities. For business leaders, investors, and professionals across industries, his insights offer both a roadmap and a wake-up call for navigating the accelerating pace of change.
The End of Programming As We Know It
"In the past, users of computers have had to learn computers. I think in the future, computers will learn humans," Khosla explains, articulating a fundamental shift in our relationship with technology. His seemingly paradoxical prediction of "no more programmers or everyone's a programmer" reveals a dual transformation already underway through his strategic investments.
Cognition, one of Khosla's portfolio companies, is developing AI that functions like a software intern—one that can code autonomously and progressively handle more complex tasks. Meanwhile, Replit, another company he's backed, enables users to create software using plain English commands, requiring no traditional coding knowledge.
"Every employee can write their own applications without going to IT," Khosla predicts, envisioning a workplace where technological barriers dissolve and innovation becomes democratized. This isn't just a technical evolution—it's a complete reimagining of who creates software and how organizations operate.