▲ | deadbabe 6 days ago | ||||||||||||||||||||||
It’s not incredibly powerful, it’s incrementally powerful. Getting the first 80% via LLM is already the incredible power. A sufficiently skilled developer should be able to handle the rest with ease. It is not worth doing anything unnatural in an effort to chase down the last 20%, you are just wasting time and atrophying skills. If you can get full 95% in some one shot prompts, great. But don’t go chasing waterfallls. | |||||||||||||||||||||||
▲ | SkyPuncher 6 days ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||
No, it actually has an exponential growth type of effect on productivity to be able to push it to the boundary more. I’m making this a bit contrived, but I’m simplifying it to demonstrate the underlying point. When an LLM is 80% effect, I’m limits to doing 5 things in parallel since I still need to jump in 20% of the time. When an LLM is 90% effect, I can do 10 things at once. When it’s 95%, 20 things. 99%, 100 things. Now, obviously I can’t actually juggle 10 or 20 things at once. However, the point is there are actually massive productivity gains to be had when you can reduce your involvement in a task from 20% to, even 10%. You’re effectively 2x as productive. | |||||||||||||||||||||||
|