| ▲ | fnordpiglet 2 hours ago | |
Fascinating - I find the opposite is true. I think of edge cases more and direct the exploration of them. I’ve found my 35 years experience tells me where the gaps will be and I’m usually right. I’ve been able to build much more complex software than before not because I didn’t know how but because as one person I couldn’t possibly do it. The process isn’t any easier just faster. I’ve found also AI assisted stuff is remarkable for algorithmically complex things to implement. However one thing I definitely identify with is the trouble sleeping. I am finally able to do a plethora of things I couldn’t do before due to the limits of one man typing. But I don’t build tools I don’t need, I have too little time and too many needs. | ||
| ▲ | ncruces an hour ago | parent [-] | |
> I’ve found also AI assisted stuff is remarkable for algorithmically complex things to implement. AI is really good to rubber duck through a problem. The LLM has heard of everything… but learned nothing. It also doesn't really care about your problem. So, you can definitely learn from it. But the moment it creates something you don't understand, you've lost control. You had one job. | ||