Remix.run Logo
FeteCommuniste 2 hours ago

I don't think there's going to be any catastrophic collapse but I predict de-slopping will grow to occupy more and more developer time.

Who knows, maybe soon enough we'll have specially trained de-slopper bots, too.

HighGoldstein 2 hours ago | parent [-]

> Who knows, maybe soon enough we'll have specially trained de-slopper bots, too.

Fire, meet oil.

woeirua 2 hours ago | parent [-]

The naysayers said we’d never even get to this point. It’s far more plausible to me that AI will advance enough to de-slopify our code than it is to me that there will be some karmic reckoning in which the graybeards emerge on top again.

omnicognate an hour ago | parent [-]

What point have we reached? All I see is HN drowning in insufferable, identical-sounding posts about how everything has changed forever. Meanwhile at work, in a high stakes environment where software not working as intended has actual consequences, there are... a few new tools some people like using and think they may be a bit more productive with. And the jury's still out even on that.

The initial excitement of LLMs has significantly cooled off, the model releases show rapidly diminishing returns if not outright equilibrium and the only vibe-coded software project I've seen get any actual public use is Claude Code, which is riddled with embarrassing bugs its own developers have publicly given up on fixing. The only thing I see approaching any kind of singularity is the hype.

I think I'm done with HN at this point. It's turned into something resembling moltbook. I'll try back in a couple of years when maybe things will have changed a bit around here.

beoberha 23 minutes ago | parent | next [-]

> The initial excitement of LLMs has significantly cooled off, the model releases show rapidly diminishing returns if not outright equilibrium and the only vibe-coded software project I've seen get any actual public use is Claude Code, which is riddled with embarrassing bugs its own developers have publicly given up on fixing. The only thing I see approaching any kind of singularity is the hype.

I am absolutely baffled by this take. I work in an objectively high stakes environment (Big 3 cloud database provider) and we are finally (post Opus 4.5) seeing the models and tools become good enough to drive the vast majority of our coding work. Devops and livesite is a harder problem, but even there we see very promising results.

I was a skeptic too. I was decently vocal about AI working for single devs but could never scale to large, critical enterprise codebases and systems. I was very wrong.

sph 26 minutes ago | parent | prev | next [-]

> I think I'm done with HN at this point.

On the bright side, this forum is gonna be great fun to read in 2 or 3 years, whether the AI dream takes off, or crashes to the ground.

kuboble an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-]

I am not in a high stakes environment and work on a one-person size projects.

But for months I have almost stopped writing actual lines of code myself.

Frequency and quality of my releases had improved. I got very good feedback on those releases from my customer base, and the number of bugs reported is not larger than on a code written by me personally.

The only downside is that I do not know the code inside out anymore even if i read it all, it feels like a code written by co-worker.

pengaru an hour ago | parent | prev [-]

It's no coincidence HN is hosted by a VC. VC-backed tech is all about boom-bust hype cycles analogous to the lever pull of a giant slot machine.