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danparsonson commented on LLMs as the new high level language   federicopereiro.com/llm-h... · Posted by u/swah
TZubiri · a day ago
"Following this hypothesis, what C did to assembler, what Java did to C, what Javascript/Python/Perl did to Java, now LLM agents are doing to all programming languages."

This is not an appropriate analogy, at least not right now.

Code Agents are generating code from prompts, in that sense the metaphor is correct. However Agents then read the code and it becomes input and they generate more code. This was never the case for compilers, an LLM used in this sense is strictly not a compiler because it is not cyclic and not directional.

danparsonson · a day ago
I think it's appropriate in terms of the results rather than the process; the bigger problem I see is that programming languages are designed to be completely unambiguous, whereas human language is not ("Go to the shop and buy one box of eggs, and if they have carrots, buy three") so we're transitioning from exactly specifying what we want the software to do, to tying ourselves in knots trying to specify it exactly, while a machine tries to disambiguate our request. I bet lawyers would make good vibe coders.
danparsonson commented on LLMs as the new high level language   federicopereiro.com/llm-h... · Posted by u/swah
apical_dendrite · a day ago
I'm trying to work with vibe-coded applications and it's a nightmare. I am trying to make one application multi-tenant by moving a bunch of code that's custom to a single customer into config. There are 200+ line methods, dead code everywhere, tons of unnecessary complexity (for instance, extra mapping layers that were introduced to resolve discrepancies between keys, instead of just using the same key everywhere). No unit tests, of course, so it's very difficult to tell if anything broke. When the system requirements change, the LLM isn't removing old code, it's just adding new branches and keeping the dead code around.

I ask the developer the simplest questions, like "which of the multiple entry-points do you use to test this code locally", or "you have a 'mode' parameter here that determines which branch of the code executes, which of these modes are actually used? and I get a bunch of babble, because he has no idea how any of it works.

Of course, since everyone is expected to use Cursor for everything and move at warp speed, I have no time to actually untangle this crap.

The LLM is amazing at some things - I can get it to one-shot adding a page to a react app for instance. But if you don't know what good code looks like, you're not going to get a maintainable result.

danparsonson · a day ago
You've just described the entirely-human-made project that I'm working on now.... at least now we can deliver the intractable mess much more quickly!
danparsonson commented on The AI boom is causing shortages everywhere else   washingtonpost.com/techno... · Posted by u/1vuio0pswjnm7
WalterBright · a day ago
> There are many people like me

I'm sure there are. Doesn't mean most people are like that. Consider retirees. Some find meaningful activities, many just rot away out of not having a purpose.

What percentage of people currently living off of welfare are doing meaningful work?

danparsonson · a day ago
> What percentage of people currently living off of welfare are doing meaningful work?

Do you have that number? Do you have any numbers to back up your claims or are you just talking about what works for you?

danparsonson commented on 1,400-year-old tomb featuring giant owl sculpture discovered in Mexico   cnn.com/2026/01/29/scienc... · Posted by u/breve
OJFord · 5 days ago
I don't think it's silly for all purposes, it's silly to be racist about it, to say that 'pure x' is more desirable, or all that's 'allowed' in 'your' country etc., but that doesn't mean there's never any value in communicating 'what our home culture was like where and when we grew up'.

I'm British, my wife isn't, and her parents emigrated from a third country before she was born. Our hypothetical children will not be 'purely' from any one of those cultures (nor would she even say she was 'purely' of her birth country not her parents'), and I think that does convey information.

danparsonson · 4 days ago
OK, so if you don't mind, let's take your family as a good example of what I'm saying, and let's further posit a world where Britain completely halts all immigration today, so from some near future point, every child born in Britain is born of British-born parents. Now let's suppose that you have children, and that they remain in Britain, marry locals, and have children of their own, onwards forever, never leaving the country except for holidays.

Since, as you say, your hypothetical children would not be purely British, at what point are your descendents 'pure Brits'? Is it 50 years from now? 100? 500? Now think about what life was like in Britain 50, 100 and 500 years ago. How close would you say the lives of children today are, compared to children in those times? Closer than to children born today in, say, Norway? Consider that 1986 is as far away from today as it was from 1946; someone born today is as distant from someone born in the 80's, as someone born in the 80's was from the end of World War 2.

And think about British culture in the 90's and 00's - it was heavily influenced by US culture at that time; today I imagine things like K-Pop are having an increasing influence. Britain (as indeed most other nations) has for thousands of years been a melting pot of different cultural inputs. In fact, the very notion of 'Britain' has changed over time - the British empire once spanned the globe and included places as diverse as India, South Africa and Singapore. Even the Britain of today is not a single country; would you say that, say, Northern Irish and south-eastern English people are culturally homogeneous?

So, while I do agree that telling me you were born in Britain, or China, or Zimbabwe would help me to calibrate broad expectations about you, I can't see how any of those things is or ever was 'pure' in any way.

danparsonson commented on xAI joins SpaceX   spacex.com/updates#xai-jo... · Posted by u/g-mork
quesera · 6 days ago
> Greedy, ruthless and well-connected?

Sure, but that's not enough.

> These people are hardly genuises.

You're quite wrong about this. I know it's tempting to look at a damaged person and assume that they possess no actual extraordinary capabilities, but these people are very very smart. Surely they'd be top-tier HN. :)

(Defining "genius" is a whole nother thing, but using any common vernacular meaning, my statement will apply.)

Not all billionaires, of course. In context, we're talking about Ellison and Musk. There may be others implied. These people are in fact extremely intelligent. What's missing is not horsepower.

danparsonson · 4 days ago
> Sure, but that's not enough.

You're right - a healthy dose of luck, 'right place, right time', is also needed. Plus the arrogance to assume that they deserve everything they want.

> You're quite wrong about this. I know it's tempting to look at a damaged person and assume that they possess no actual extraordinary capabilities, but these people are very very smart. Surely they'd be top-tier HN. :)

Maybe you and I disagree on the definition of a genius; Ellison and Musk are of course smart, but there are very many smart people - that is also not sufficient, and 'genius' is not required. Elon Musk spends a lot of time arguing with random people on Twitter, and espouses some very dumb, and sometimes racist views. He's a good salesman (principally of himself), and possessed of huge self-confidence, but I don't see any evidence of genius. More like being born 3-0 up and convinced he'd scored a hat-trick, amplified by survivor bias; for every billionaire, there are thousands like them who just didn't get the right breaks.

Compare Elon and 'lawnmower' Larry to everyone's favourite genius, Einstein, and they're not even in the same league.

danparsonson commented on Data centers in space makes no sense   civai.org/blog/space-data... · Posted by u/ajyoon
NitpickLawyer · 5 days ago
Dragon spends 6mo+ in orbit regularly. I have no idea what's happening in this thread, but it seems everyone is going insane. People don't even know what they're talking about, but they keep on bringing bad arguments. I'm out.
danparsonson · 4 days ago
> Dragon spends 6mo+ in orbit regularly.

... hooked up to the ISS, with humans in attendance to fix anything that goes wrong... not doing very much.

It's akin to the difference between a boat moored up in a port, and an autonomous drone in the middle of the Pacific. Aside from that, satellites have to maneuver in orbit (to stay in the correct orbit, and increasingly to avoid other satellites). Hefting around additional kgs of shielding makes that more difficult, and costly in terms of propellant, which is very important for the lifetime of a satellite.

danparsonson commented on 1,400-year-old tomb featuring giant owl sculpture discovered in Mexico   cnn.com/2026/01/29/scienc... · Posted by u/breve
OJFord · 5 days ago
But it's also like, we know what we mean, if the Zapotec people/community are fairly insular or at least in marriage/procreation like to be with their own then that's for casual purposes 'mostly pure'.

Otherwise I can't even say I'm 'British', because who knows what mix I am if I go back further than I have record of, which is just silly, we know what we mean.

danparsonson · 5 days ago
You're very close to following that line of enquiry to its logical conclusion, which is that our nationalities tell us little of any real value except what our home culture was like where and when we grew up. Personally I've come to regard identifying as any nationality as silly except for legal purposes.

We're humans, and humans have always and always mixed between cultural groups, except in rare instances of total isolation; such people are not 'pure' anything, but they would likely be inbred. There is no 'pure' genetic strain of any race or indeed any organism. Whatever divisions there are between us are extremely blurry and constantly changing.

danparsonson commented on Data centers in space makes no sense   civai.org/blog/space-data... · Posted by u/ajyoon
NitpickLawyer · 5 days ago
> You are confidently incorrect.

No, he's not. Dragon is using CotS, non rad-hardened CPUs. And it's rated to carry humans to space.

> AWST: So, NASA does not require SpaceX to use radiation-hardened computer systems on the Dragon?

John Muratore: No, as a matter of fact NASA doesn't require it on their own systems, either. I spent 30 years at NASA and in the Air Force doing this kind of work. My last job was chief engineer of the shuttle program at NASA, and before that as shuttle flight director. I managed flight programs and built the mission control center that we use there today.

On the space station, some areas are using rad-hardened parts and other parts use COTS parts. Most of the control of the space station occurs through laptop computers which are not radiation hardened.

> Q: So, these flight computers on Dragon – there are three on board, and that's for redundancy?

A: There are actually six computers. They operate in pairs, so there are three computer units, each of which have two computers checking on each other. The reason we have three is when operating in proximity of ISS, we have to always have two computer strings voting on something on critical actions. We have three so we can tolerate a failure and still have two voting on each other. And that has nothing to do with radiation, that has to do with ensuring that we're safe when we're flying our vehicle in the proximity of the space station.

I went into the lab earlier today, and we have 18 different processing units with computers in them. We have three main computers, but 18 units that have a computer of some kind, and all of them are triple computers – everything is three processors. So we have like 54 processors on the spacecraft. It's a highly distributed design and very fault-tolerant and very robust.

[1] - https://aviationweek.com/dragons-radiation-tolerant-design

danparsonson · 5 days ago
Carrying humans to space is not the same use case as spending long periods of time in orbit.
danparsonson commented on The next steps for Airbus' big bet on open rotor engines   aerospaceamerica.aiaa.org... · Posted by u/CGMthrowaway
inhumantsar · 6 days ago
> Airbus is also assessing shielding the area of the fuselage closest to the engines to minimize the risk of a blade off — one or more composite blades breaking, which could dent or puncture the fuselage and, in the worst-case scenario, strike a passenger.

sightly terrifying

danparsonson · 5 days ago
Reminded me of this: https://youtu.be/j973645y5AA?si=QJrNJe0gT-zwpElD

Seems like quite an engineering challenge with this new design...

danparsonson commented on xAI joins SpaceX   spacex.com/updates#xai-jo... · Posted by u/g-mork
vessenes · 6 days ago
Well jesters are supposed to call out the BS, yes?

That said, How do you (accurately) describe Ellison?

danparsonson · 6 days ago
Greedy, ruthless and well-connected? These people are hardly genuises.

u/danparsonson

KarmaCake day4042October 27, 2009View Original