Readit News logoReadit News
afry1 commented on AI companies aim 'not to help workers, but to replace them'   vaticannews.va/en/world/n... · Posted by u/rawgabbit
afry1 · 10 days ago
And the leaders of these companies are so genuinely surprised at the fact that the people are refusing this technology.

Sam Altman: “Looking at what’s possible, it does feel sort of surprisingly slow.”

Satya Nadella: “For this not to be a bubble by definition, it requires that the benefits of this are much more evenly spread.”

afry1 commented on We automated everything except knowing what's going on   eversole.dev/blog/we-auto... · Posted by u/kennethops
alanbernstein · 11 days ago
True, but I think there's another dimension implied: how many devs are left that understand the code? Being able to start at zero is a fascinating surprise (compared to five years ago).
afry1 · 11 days ago
At least with a person, you can say that there's one person in your org that understands the code after they write it and submit it for review.

Maybe they stick around for a while, maybe they move on to another job, but they were THERE at some point. They have a name. You can ask them questions about what they did. And hey, they still exist in the real world too, so you can get in touch with them even after they leave if you need to.

AI powered development is like a guy shows up, gets hired for 90 seconds, writes part of a feature, and dies instantly once the code hits the screen.

afry1 commented on We automated everything except knowing what's going on   eversole.dev/blog/we-auto... · Posted by u/kennethops
iammjm · 11 days ago
We are speedrunning legacy "codebases" all the time. Or do you conjure up your own pickaxe, mine your own minerals, produce your own electricity, and construct your own computers and networks first before you go off to develop an application? Would you even know how to do those things? That is all enormous legacy codebase that we speedrun all the time. Just add one more to it.
afry1 · 11 days ago
I sure don't.

But when I'm using all of those things (pickaxe, mineral mine, power station, internet network hub), I know that there was a thinking human being that took some measure of human care and consideration when creating them. And that there are people on the other side of the economic transaction to talk to or hold accountable when something goes wrong.

afry1 commented on We automated everything except knowing what's going on   eversole.dev/blog/we-auto... · Posted by u/kennethops
afry1 · 11 days ago
"The future belongs to whoever understands what they just shipped."

Perfect summary.

It's like we invented a world where you can finally, _finally_ speedrun an enormous legacy codebase and all patted ourselves on the back like that was a good thing.

afry1 commented on A case for Go as the best language for AI agents   getbruin.com/blog/go-is-t... · Posted by u/karakanb
bigfishrunning · 12 days ago
Because you'll have to review it, and Go's design limits the number of ways it can go wrong.

Code is free, sure, but it's not guaranteed to be correct, and review time is not free.

afry1 · 12 days ago
If code must be correct, and review time is not free, and review time is costlier than code time, why not just ...

... write the code yourself?

afry1 commented on A case for Go as the best language for AI agents   getbruin.com/blog/go-is-t... · Posted by u/karakanb
afry1 · 12 days ago
If code is now free, why does the language matter at all?
afry1 commented on Noise cancelling a fan   chillphysicsenjoyer.subst... · Posted by u/crescit_eundo
afry1 · 6 months ago
Those Lasko fans have pretty raw edges on the blades of the fan itself, which I think contributes a lot to the noise. If you take the cover off, sand down the nubs and bits of flaking plastic, and reassemble, I think that will take care of a lot of noise.
afry1 commented on Teen mathematicians tie knots through a mind-blowing fractal   quantamagazine.org/teen-m... · Posted by u/GavCo
julianeon · a year ago
I've always wondered if it's possible to harness teen minds to solve significant math problems in high school, if you formulated them well and found the right scope. I think it's possible.
afry1 · a year ago
It is very possible!

Just this year these girls discovered a proof for the Pythagorean theorem using nothing but trigonometry, a feat considered impossible until they did it: https://youtu.be/VHeWndnHuQs

afry1 commented on Positive Affirmations for Site Reliability Engineers [video]   youtube.com/watch?v=ia8Q5... · Posted by u/shevis
afry1 · 2 years ago
These guys have a fabulous bit on microservices that I watch at least monthly to maintain my sanity.

https://youtu.be/y8OnoxKotPQ

afry1 commented on My sixth year as a bootstrapped founder   mtlynch.io/solo-developer... · Posted by u/mtlynch
afry1 · 2 years ago
Congrats Michael! I've been following along with your story on and off since 2019-ish, very cool to read about how things are getting along.

u/afry1

KarmaCake day271January 28, 2021View Original