▲ | psunavy03 9 days ago | |||||||
People have been talking about natural language becoming a programming language for way longer than even Jensen Huang has been talking about it. Once upon a time, they tried to adapt natural language into a programming language, and they came up with this thing called COBOL. Same idea: "then the managers can code, and we won't need to hire so many expensive devs!" And now the COBOL devs are retiring after a whole career . . . | ||||||||
▲ | pizza 9 days ago | parent [-] | |||||||
But isn't it actually more like, COBOL lets you talk in COBOL-ese (which is kinda stilted), whereas LLMs let you talk in LLM-ese (which gets a lot closer to actual language)? And then since the skill cap on language is basically infinite, that this becomes a question of how good you are at saying what you want - to the extent it intersects with what the LLM can do. | ||||||||
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