| ▲ | legostormtroopr 3 hours ago | |
Unless I am wildly misreading this, this is actually worse that both GUIs and LLMs combined. LLMs offer a level of flexibility and non-determinism that allow them to adapt to different situations. GUIs offer precision and predictability - they are the same every time. Which means people can learn them and navigate them quickly. If you've ever seen a bank teller or rental car agent navigate a GUI or TUI they tab through and type so quickly because they have expert familliarity. But this - with a non-determinstic user interface generated by AI, every time a user engages with a UI its different. So they a more rigid UI but also a non-deterministic set of options every time. Which means instead of memorising what is in every drop down and tabbing through quickly, they need to re-learn the interface every time. | ||
| ▲ | dwb 34 minutes ago | parent | next [-] | |
It’s intended for conversations that are probably different every time too. It’s like a more expressive form of what Claude Code already does with the “AskUserQuestion” interface. | ||
| ▲ | AlexCoventry 2 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |
I don't think you have to use this if it's not working in your case. I think the idea is to try to anticipate the next few turns of the conversation, so you can pick the tree you want to go down in a fast way. If the prediction is accurate, I could see that being effective. | ||