| ▲ | ravioli_fog 4 hours ago | ||||||||||||||||
I personally see plenty of hype but I've also been following the trends and using the tools "on the ground". At least in terms of software these tools are a substantial shift. Will they replace developers? No idea, but their impacts are likely to be felt for a very long time. Their rate of improvement in programming is growing rapidly. Do feel AI is overall just hype? When did you last try AI tools and what about their use made you conclude they will likely be forgotten or ignored by the mainstream? | |||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | edent 4 hours ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||
I spent an hour with Gemini this morning trying to get instructions to compile a common open source tool for an uncommon platform. It was an hour of pasting in error messages and getting back "Aha! Here's the final change you need to make!" Underwhelming doesn't even begin to describe it. But, even if I'm wrong, we were told that COBOL would make programming redundant. Then UML was going to accelerate development. Visual programming would mean no more mistakes. All of them are in the coding mix somewhere, and I suspect LLMs will be. | |||||||||||||||||
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