I find for 90% of the things I'm doing LLM removes 90% of the starting friction and let me get to the part that I'm actually interested in. Of course I also develop professionally in a python stack and LLMs are 1 shotting a ton of stuff. My work is standard data pipelines and web apps.
I'm a tech lead at faang adjacent w/ 11YOE and the systems I work with are responsible for about half a billion dollars a year in transactions directly and growing. You could argue maybe my standards are lower than yours but I think if I was making deadly mistakes the company would have been on my ass by now or my peers would have caught them.
Everybody that I work with is getting valuable output from LLMs. We are using all the latest openAI models and have a business relationship with openAI. I don't think I'm even that good at prompting and mostly rely on "vibes". Half of the time I'm pointing the model to an example and telling it "in the style of X do X for me".
I feel like comments like these almost seem gaslight-y or maybe there's just a major expectation mismatch between people. Are you expecting LLMs to just do exactly what you say and your entire job is to sit back prompt the LLM? Maybe I'm just use to shit code but I've looked at many code bases and there is a huge variance in quality and the average is pretty poor. The average code that AI pumps out is much better.
Just right now, I've been feeding o4-mini with high effort a C++ file with a deadlock in it.
It has failed to fix the problem after 3 times, and it introduced a double free bug in one of the attempts. It did not see the double free problem until I pointed it out.
Lurk moar.
I would accept this is a problem though. I just question whether the solution is censoring views. I guess I'll give an example...
In the UK there's a lot of people questioning why young boys today seem to often hold such radical views about women. Of course, there's the surface level explanation we're given that boys are watching people like Andrew Tate online and are becoming radicalised, but then you have to ask why boys are watching people like Andrew Tate in the first place when they could also be listening to male feminists and have gone in the opposite direction.
It seems to me the most likely explanation for this content selection bias is that boys are told lies about gender from a very early age and then on hearing become easily radicalised partial truths from people like Tate. The uncomfortable reality is that Tate is telling half-truths about the biological differences and that many of these half-truths are just denied outright by others in positions of authority. It's really no wonder they find his content interesting. It's probably the same reason someone like Jordan Peterson seemed to fill a large cultural hole a few years back. Somehow just being positive about the unique contributions and strengths of men was a radical and shocking position that people found interesting.
I'm just here to say that 4chan seems to be censoring stuff that goes against it.
They've basically made it a safe space echo chamber for the alt-right.
The most notable radicalisation happening on /pol/ nowadays, in my opinion, is a kind of hyper-masculine third-worldist ideology that is anti-semitic in its foundation and deeply misogynistic. While those two traits might sound superficially similar to the 2015 "Alt right", this new ideology has a significant pro-Islamist tendency, and has an almost comprehensive disdain for the west and its ways of life, in favour of authoritarian regimes like like Russia, Iran, and China. Also, as is being corroborated by other online circles like the Nick Fuentes "Groyper" movement, this faction of the online far-right is an increasingly post-racial one, with more traditionally white supremacist views disappearing, to be filled in by antisemitism.
Personally, I think this cultural political shift in the imageboard represents the increased representation of developing countries online, and is an important case study in how quickly cultural foundations can shift inside the borderless land of the internet.
Anti-jewish content was there 10 years ago as well. The board is full of white supremacist posts when I checked yesterday with lots of threads complaining about non-white races. There's absolutely no indication that it has been overtaken by developing countries.
Just because they changed their name to "groyper" doesn't mean they aren't alt-right anymore.
As for support for authoritarian regimes like russia, it is obvious that they are running propaganda on the website and want to sow division in the US by encouraging fringe groups like these.
Hetzner provides a much simpler set of services than AWS. Less complexity to go wrong.
A lot of people want the brand recognition too. Its also become the standard way of doing things and is part of the business culture. I have sometimes been told its unprofessional or looks bad to run things yourself instead of using a managed service.
First I used an ex101 with an i9-13900. Within a week it just froze. It could not be reset remotely. Nothing in kern.log. Support offered no solution but a hard reboot. No mention of what might be wrong other than user error.
A few months later, one of the drives just disconnects from raid by itself. It took support 1 hour to respond and they said they found no issue so it must be my fault.
Then I changed to a ryzen based server and it also mysteriously had problems like this. Again the support blamed the user.
It was only after I cancelled the server and several months later that I see this so I know it isn't just me.
https://docs.hetzner.com/robot/dedicated-server/general-info...