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I think Brooks define a silver bullet as a ten-fold increase in productivity. I dont think there have ever been a single invention that results in ten-fold productivity increase in general, and I think it is unlikely, since ten-fold is quite a lot.

However e.g. the jump from assembly to higher level languages have been a major productivity improvement, and other improvements like garbage collection, IDE's and so on have improved productivity significantly. And we will no doubt get new improvements in the future.

(Of course in specific niches you can have silver bullets - the availibility of the right library or tool can easily increse productivity more than ten-fold for a specific task.)

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I think Brooks define a silver bullet as a ten-fold increase in productivity. I dont think there have ever been a single invention that results in ten-fold productivity increase in general, and I think it is unlikely, since ten-fold is quite a lot.

However e.g. the jump from assembly to higher level languages have been a major productivity improvement, and other improvements like garbage collection, IDE's and so on have improved productivity significantly. And we will no doubt get new improvements in the future.