I have see a surge of bootcamp-esque places in tech destinations that seem to be offering a "find the spark again" (and/or "fill the resume gap after the layoff" if you're a cynical prick like me) that seem to cater to the already educated/experienced crowd, which I feel are potentially viable.
As someone who did a year-long bootcamp-esque program in web development at a community college, followed by employment in tech (during which I picked up a BSc and MS in Comp Sci part-time while working), I can say that a very good bootcamp program can teach you to code in a very skilled manner, well-and-above what you pick up in a BSc in CS.
And unless you work early on at a place with a big emphasis on properly educating and mentoring juniors off the bat, you can have a big leg up with raw coding skill imo.
The obvious answer is yes. But I’m having a hard time imagining universities 10 years from now remotely resembling the behemoths they are today.
But the demand might drop a bit anyway. People have noticed how dire the job hunting situation is at the moment, and it's especially bad in tech. I suspect some people will be put off by that anyway.