Readit News logoReadit News
sundache commented on Building a Personal AI Factory   john-rush.com/posts/ai-20... · Posted by u/derek
1dom · 2 months ago
I'm very pro LLM and AI. But I completely agree with the comment about how many pieces praising LLMs are doing so with trivial examples. Trivial might not be the right word, but I can't think of a better one that doesn't have a negative connotation, but this shouldn't be negative. Your examples are good and useful, and capture a bunch of tasks a software engineer would do.

I'd say your mandelbrot debug and the LLVM patch are both "trivial" in the same sense: they're discrete, well defined, clear-success-criteria-tasks that could be assigned to any mid/senior software engineer in a relevant domain and they could chip through it in a few weeks.

Don't get me wrong, that's an insane power and capability of LLMs, I agree. But ultimately it's just doing a day job that millions of people can do sleep deprived and hungover.

Non-trivial examples are things that would take a team of different specialist skillsets months to create. One obvious potential reason why there's few non-trivial AI examples is because non-trivial AI examples require non-trivial amount of time to be able to generate and verify.

A non-trivial example isn't an example you can look at the output and say "yup, AI's done well here". It requires someone spends time going into what's been produced, assessing it, essentially redesigning it as a human to figure out all the complexity of a modern non-trivial system to confirm the AI actually did all that stuff correctly.

An in depth audit of a complex software system can take months or even years and is a thorough and tedious task for a human, and the Venn diagrams of humans who are thinking "I want to spend more time doing thorough, tedious code tasks" and "I want to mess around with AI coding" is 2 separate circles.

sundache · 2 months ago
I only see 148 lines of assembly and a dockerfile that's 7 lines long. Am I missing something or should that take a human less then several weeks.
sundache commented on DeepSeek R2 launch stalled as CEO balks at progress   reuters.com/world/china/d... · Posted by u/nsoonhui
Papazsazsa · 2 months ago
I don't know why this isn't the crux of our current geopolitical spat.

Surely it would be cheaper and easier for the CCP to develop their own chipmaking capacity than going to war in the Taiwan strait?

sundache · 2 months ago
A problem they face in building their own capacity is that ASML isn't allowed to export their newest machines to China. The US has even pressured them to stop servicing some machines already in China. They've been working on getting their own ASML competitor for decades, but so far unsuccessfully.
sundache commented on Booking.com is moving its customer service staff to an outsourcing company   reddit.com/r/antiwork/com... · Posted by u/sid6376
MomoXenosaga · 4 years ago
The Netherlands has liberalized worker rights to the point it would make Elon Musk cry.

This place is a weird mix of Marxism and laissez-faire capitalism.

sundache · 4 years ago
They CS people in Amsterdam aren't getting fired though.

u/sundache

KarmaCake day37July 8, 2020View Original