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marginalia_nu 3 hours ago

I don't actually mind AI-aided development, a tool is a tool and should be used if you find it useful, but I think the vibe coded show HN projects are overall pretty boring. They generally don't have a lot of work put into them, and as a result, the author (pilot?) hasn't generally thought too much about the problem space, and so there isn't really much of a discussion to be had.

The cool part about pre-AI show HN is you got to talk to someone who had thought about a problem for way longer than you had. It was a real opportunity to learn something new, to get an entirely different perspective.

I feel like this is what AI has done to the programming discussion. It draws in boring people with boring projects who don't have anything interesting to say about programming.

jbreckmckye an hour ago | parent | next [-]

One of the great benefits of AI tools, is they allow anyone to build stuff... even if they have no ideas or knowledge.

One of the great drawbacks of AI tools, is they allow anyone to build stuff... even if they have no ideas or knowledge.

It used to be that ShowHN was a filter: in order to show stuff, you had to have done work. And if you did the work, you probably thought about the problem, at the very least the problem was real enough to make solving it worthwhile.

Now there's no such filter function, so projects are built whether or not they're good ideas, by people who don't know very much

SCdF 36 minutes ago | parent | next [-]

Agreed, and were gonna see this everywhere that AI can touch. Our filter functions for books, video, music, etc are all now broken. And worst of all that breaking coincides with an avalanche of slop, making detection even harder.

There is this real disconnect between what the visible level of effort implies you've done, and what you actually have to do.

It's going to be interesting to see how our filters get rewired for this visually-impressive-but-otherwise-slop abundance.

Eddy_Viscosity2 31 minutes ago | parent [-]

People will build AI 'quality detectors' to sort and filter the slop. The problem is of course it won't work very well and will drown all the human channels that are trying to curate various genres. I'm not optimistic about things not all turning into a grey sludge of similar mediocre material everywhere.

SirFatty 20 minutes ago | parent | prev | next [-]

"One of the great benefits of AI tools, is they allow people to build stuff, even if they have no ideas or knowledge."

Wait, what? That's a great benefit?

dewey 15 minutes ago | parent | next [-]

Sure, there's many examples (I have a few personal ones as well) where I'm just building small tools and helpers for myself which I just wouldn't have done before because it would take me half a day. Or non-technical people at work that now just build some macros and scripts for Google Sheets that they would've never done before to automate little things.

jbreckmckye 10 minutes ago | parent | prev [-]

I am being slightly sarcastic

catchcatchcatch 16 minutes ago | parent | prev [-]

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mchaver 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

I see a lot of projects repeated: screen capture tool, LLM wrapper, blog/newsletter, marketing tool for reddit/twitter, manage social media accounts. These things have been around for a while so it is really easy for an LLM to spit them out for someone that does not know how to code.

hypercube33 an hour ago | parent [-]

Agreed. I'm over here working on Quake 2 mods and reverse engineering Off world trading company so I can finish an open source server for it using AI.

Thing is I worked manually on both of these a lot before I even touched Claude on them so I basically was able to hit my wishlist items that I don't have time to deal with these days but have the logic figured out already.

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

My favorite part about people promoting (and probably vote stuffing) their closed-source non-free app that clone other apps is when people share the superior free alternatives in the comments.

rubslopes 21 minutes ago | parent | prev | next [-]

I predict that now that coding has become a commodity, smart young people drawn to technical problem-solving will start choosing other career paths over programming. I just don't know which ones, since AI seems to be commoditizing every form of engineering work.

airstrike 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

we need a Vibe HN

elcapitan an hour ago | parent | next [-]

Prompter News

layer8 an hour ago | parent [-]

Hacker Slop

reconnecting 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

listen_to_what_the_man_said.stm

fuzzfactor 2 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

That may be something.

Having too may subs could get out of hand, but sometimes you end up with so much paperwork generated so fast that it needs its own dedicated whole drawer in your filing cabinet ;)

koakuma-chan 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

One thing about vibe coding is that unless you are an expert in what you have vibe coded, you have no idea if it actually works properly, and it probably doesn't.

numpad0 an hour ago | parent [-]

Worse yet, if you're not an expert(with autodidacts potentially qualifying), your ideas won't be original anyway.

You'll be inventing a lot of novel cicular apparatus with a pivot and circumferencrial rubber absorbers for transportation and it'll take people serious efforts to convince you it's just a wheel.

marginalia_nu 40 minutes ago | parent [-]

In most domains, working on a project for a few years will make you an expert.

koakuma-chan 39 minutes ago | parent [-]

Working? Maybe. Prompting? Unlikely.

verdverm 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

> the vibe coded show HN projects are overall pretty boring

concur, perhaps a dedicated or alternative, itch.io like area named "Slop HN:..."

HugoDz 29 minutes ago | parent | prev [-]

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