| ▲ | legitster 17 hours ago |
| Convince your PMs to use an LLM to help "breadboard" their requirements. It's a really good use case. They can ask their dumb questions they are afraid to and an LLM will do a decent job of parsing their ideas, asking questions, and putting together a halfway decent set of requirements. |
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| ▲ | gitremote 17 hours ago | parent | next [-] |
| PMs wouldn't be able to ask the right questions. They have zero experience with developer experience (DevEx) and they only have experience with user experience (UX). |
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| ▲ | tmp10423288442 16 hours ago | parent [-] | | You can hope that an LLM might have some instructions related to DevEx in its prompt at least. There's no way to completely fix stupid, anymore than you can convince a naive vibecoder that just vibing a new Linux-compatible kernel written entirely in Zig is a feasible project. |
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| ▲ | Scarblac 16 hours ago | parent | prev [-] |
| How does the LLM get all the required knowledge about the domain and the product to ask relevant questions? |
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| ▲ | sh4rks 10 hours ago | parent [-] | | Give it access to the codebase and a text file with all relevant business knowledge. | | |
| ▲ | wiml 8 hours ago | parent [-] | | Man ... if there were a text file with "all relevant business knowledge" in any job I've ever worked, it would have been revolutionary. I'd say 25% of my work-hours are just going around to stakeholders and getting them to say what some of their unstated assumptions and requirements are. |
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