▲ | dmbche 16 hours ago | |
Simple thought I had reading this: I've used a tool to do a task today. I used a suction sandblasting machine to remove corrosion from a part. Without the tool, had I wanted to remove the corrosion, I would've spent all day (if not more) scraping it with sandpaper (is that a tool too? With the skin of my hands then?) - this would have been tedious and could have taken me all day, scraping away millimeter by millimeter. With the machine, it took me about 3 minutes. I necessitated 4-5 minutes of training to attain this level of expertise. The worth of this machine is undeniable. How is it that LLMs are not at all so undeniably efficient? I keep hearing people tell me how they will take everyones job, but it seems like the first faceplant from all the big tech companies. (Maybe second after Meta's VR stuff) | ||
▲ | tines 15 hours ago | parent [-] | |
The difference is that LLMs are not like any other tool. Reasoning by analogy doesn't work when things are sufficiently in-analogous. For example, people try to compare this LLM tech with the automation of the car manufacturing industry. That analogy is a terrible one, because machines build better cars and are much more reliable than humans. LLMs don't build better software, they build bad software faster. Also, as a tool, LLMs discourage understanding in a way that no other tool does. |