I've spent countless hours in my career writing and reviewing Product Requirements Documents (PRDs). They are the bedrock of traditional software development—the detailed maps that are supposed to guide us from an idea to a finished feature. We debate every user story, define every edge case, and get sign-off from every stakeholder. It's a process built on the assumption that meticulous planning prevents poor execution. But what if the execution part suddenly became... instantaneous? We're standing at the edge of a new era, one where LLM agents can take a well-defined prompt and generate not just code, but entire features, in a fraction of the time it used to take. This isn't science fiction anymore. For many tasks, the bottleneck in development is no longer the coding; it's the specification. We're now facing the " PRD Paradox ": the curious situation where writing the instructions takes longer than it takes an AI to follow them. The Old Certainty...
Because a waste is a terrible thing to mind.