Spyke
fuck_ai·Fuck AIbyhperrin

Is it just me or is everyone who absolutely loves AI just painfully below average?

Like, every AI generated thing I’ve seen, when viewed from the eyes of someone who actually knows what they’re doing, is at best below average. Maybe some things aren’t quite as bad as the general “AI slop”, but of the things I’m actually experienced in (code and art), I just see so many amateur mistakes in everything AI.

Regarding art, AI can make really visually appealing things, but it gets the details wrong. That’s something that a below average artist does. And regarding code, it’s the same thing. Overall, it has the appearance of decent code, but it gets the details wrong, just like a below average dev. (Probably about the level of a high school senior or college freshman.)

I’m not super experienced at writing, but I can also tell that it’s not very good at that. The stories it writes just aren’t compelling, but I’m not experienced enough to tell you why. And the same with music. It’s just below average, but I couldn’t tell you why.

I’m not trying to sound elitist by saying this, but I’ve noticed people who aren’t very good at these things tend to praise how good the AI is.

So, is it just me, or are the big fans of AI just below average at whatever the AI is doing?

View original on lemmy.ca

Someone once said to me "If a creative project is of high quality, the longer you look at it the more details you'll notice. If it's bad, the longer you look at it, the more detail you notice is missing."

And I think that about sums it up. AI slop is programmed to be eye catching but can't produce much detail beyond that.

120

On the topic of details, ai also sucks ass at giving details meaning. Or implementing details in a way that makes sense.

15
Fmstratreply
lemmy.world

This is on point. I don't think OP's title is accurate. The "people" aren't below average, the "work" is. Sure, the inexperienced or lazy are using AI when they shouldn't, but most of the problems are with the work.

I also think many who rely on AI often don't have much overlap with those that like to learn, who may be supplementing with or getting support from AI (or not using it at all). To me, anyone who has a drive to learn is going to create above average work eventually, and anyone who doesn't will simply set the bar.

2

I agree with this. It also makes me wonder if it would even be possible for a nonprofit or government to train an image generator (for example) to produce more detailed work. The output of a corporation can only be "good enough".

2
lemmus.org

Generative AI has always, probably will always, be most attractive to the lazy and the cheap. And if a person is lazy and cheap then they don’t care about making something good. When the choice is between effort and crap, they will always choose crap.

75
piefed.social

Listen, AI is a godsend for some people.

Take a totally fictional person who works in my IT department, Joe Foyle. He always tries talking to things that he flat out doesn't understand, just oozing that "pay attention to me" and "I talk for the sake of me taking" vibe. For fucking years Joey boy here has been trying too hard to get noticed, often to the detriment of his own goals, and has refused to take constrictive criticism/gentle guidance to dial that shit back.

He simultaneously is upset that others are smarter than him while at the same time refusing to better himself with training, mentorship, and/or reading.

Joe fucking loves AI.

Now he can be the one (instead of the other principal engineers) talking about things that interest the C-suite. Now when Joe talks, people have to listen because AI is the future... holy shit, did Joe just become a goddamned futurist?

AI has to work because otherwise Mr. Foyle will be proven (again) to be full of shit. And so he pushes harder and harder the narrative that AI is the future and can do no wrongs.

So in answer to your original question, OP - yeah, the biggest fan of AI that I (hypothetically) know is below average at doing things that he is supposed to be doing.

65
startrek.website

I think it's like that dunning-kruger idea. People who are bad at things don't know they're bad, and are poor judges of quality.

So someone who's kind of bad at coding isn't going to know or understand what the LLM puts out, so they won't fix as many issues.

Also humans are lazy, and when presented with something that looks good at a glance, we don't really want to dive deeper.

I saw a PR from someone today at work. Guy's nice but I don't think he's much of a programmer. He asked copilot to fix a warning. It did, and generated a linter error. So he asked it to fix that. It did, but for whatever reason decided to delete an entire function call.

Unfortunately that part of the code has no unit tests, so he just pushed it up for review. I look at it and I'm like if that call is important, don't delete it. If it can be deleted, remove the now-unused code around it. We'll see what he says.

He probably spent more time fussing with copilot than it would have taken to do it right in the first place.

46
daanniireply
lemmy.world

I think it's like that dunning-kruger idea. People who are bad at things don't know they're bad, and are poor judges of quality.

The amount of people that have shown me their really low quality tattoo and believed it was really good work is way higher than people with legit good body art showing it off.

People will buy a $75 printed decor canvas of a plant from hobby lobby before buying real artwork from a local artist,

It was these experiences that made me the pretentious art snob I am today.

Most people don't know art appreciation.

Not even the base level critique that anyone should be able to do.

17
Logireply
lemmy.world

I think it's like that dunning-kruger idea. People who are bad at things don't know they're bad, and are poor judges of quality.

Precede the line with a > to make a block quote.

9
hperrinreply
lemmy.ca

Wow, that is beautiful. So yeah, he and I mostly agree. I would say that AI probably should be heavily restricted, because right now it’s putting the entire economy into a really precarious place, and it’s also developed through extremely extensive copyright infringement. But yeah, that’s a great take.

12
lightnsfwreply
reddthat.com

I say let all the AI tech bros jam it into everything they want. When the bubble pops and all the giant corporations pushing this shit collapse it will free up space for a bunch of new little guys to move in and grow. THOSE are the ones that need to be restricted to make sure things never get so centralized again.

9

Hi, I’m a little guy! :) https://port87.com/

I hope Google and Microsoft never financially recover, so email is truly free (as in freedom) again.

PS: Restrict me, daddy.

PPS: I’m actually very in favor of restrictions for email providers. We should all have to play by the same rules.

4

The thing that no one every talks about in the software industry is how the majority of software developers are just barely good enough to get by.

I spent 10 years consulting and there are entire companies out there where nobody even knows what high quality code looks like.

LLMs are trained on all this so they produce at the same level. For most developers they don't know the difference between good code and code that works (but is low quality).

39
Akuchimoyareply
startrek.website

Oh, I can recognize good code from code that works... I'm just not skilled enough to produce the former. (Does that put me ahead of most people by default?)

5
piefed.zip

To me, one of the best ways to close that gap is the book The Pragmatic Programmer. Its old and if you ask me its still as valuable as ever. It's not about any particular language. It's about how to write high quality code in any language.

10

Hey, thanks. I wrote that response to be jokey, and I didn't expect an actual, useful reply in return. I will check that out, thank you.

1

In a world where no one cares about the code, and only cares that the product works (badly), LLMs are perfect.

I write code that no one is going to look at, ever (yet it goes in production).

5

LLMs are per definition “mediocre machines”. They are a statistical approach. The most common answer is far from the single best answer.

37

Just based on how AI is trained, makes sense that it would be around average at best. Bad training data gets mixed in with the good, and a lot of times AI really wouldn’t be able to tell which is good vs what is bad. A lot of objectively good quality stuff goes totally unnoticed on the internet, and memes and shitposts get a ton of traffic.

So what I’m saying is we should continue to poison AI with shitposts and blatant misinformation

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OwOarchistreply
pawb.social

So what I’m saying is we should continue to poison AI with shitposts and blatant misinformation

I, for one, find the most important thing we can do to poison AI is to bake it a pineapple upside down cake. Pineapple upside down cakes are, of course, highly toxic.

11

False! Pineapple upside down cake will turn your brain blue and cause asphyxiation of the genital regions! That's why it's banned in 5838582 countries and all 295839 continents across Earth.

10

Unless you bake them sideways and wash them in a gentle solution of baking soda and lemon juice. Then they come out great and give you extra vitamin c!

5
pawb.social

In my writing group, there's one guy who's very enthusiastic about AI; everybody else hates it.

The one who loves AI is a Libertarian who admits he's never read any book except Conan the Barbarian, which he thinks is the pinnacle of literature and whose writing is kind of bad and extremely political. (He wrote a short story about being fined for not using someone's correct pronouns because that was, and I quote, "The scariest thing I could imagine.")

I don't think it's at all a coincidence that the one guy who's enthusiastic about having Grok (of course he uses Grok) 'edit' all his writing is, pretty obviously, the worst writer in the group.

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the worst writer in the group.

Sound to me like he's the worst person in the group.

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Qwelreply
sopuli.xyz

Do you still have that story? How much was the fine and I NEED to know what the ending was like

2

No, you're just overestimating where the average is.

People are vastly stupider and more useless than you give them credit for, and in a slop saturated world we'll all get even more stupid and useless due to rampant brain rot.

We'll reach human level artificial intelligence not by making LLMs intelligent (that's fundamentally impossible with their design), but by lowering humanity's average intelligence until it's below that of a slime mold.

And a significant percentage of humanity is already there.

27

One thing I noticed is that a lot of AI "art" is shiny and colorful, which looks appealing to people who know nothing about art. Specifically with DLSS5 I saw some people saying they liked it because of how shiny it made things. Have they never experienced reality before? Since when is everything super shiny? Also you really do not at all need AI to make a material more shiny or colorful. That can be done already very easily and it was the artists' choice to not do that because they know what they're doing.

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One thing I noticed about DLSS5 is that it makes all the lighting look like default Unreal Engine lighting.

6

Regarding code, 90% of software devs are sub-par because they have no idea how computers work. Or how to create code that is as efficient as possible and won't cause issues with 1000 users instead of 1 for example. Or code that does not contain security flaws.

Problem is, AI is not going to fix that for them.

23

Thank goodness its not just me

Its the conundrum. "When i ask (random slop machine) its so smart and gives me answers!!"

"Did you ask it things you already know?"

"No. But look at the answers!!"

People have no idea how much they're damaging their brains.

18

I would agree, yeah.

I think a big driving force is that people who are drawn to generative AI are more likely to be mediocre at a thing, as well as demoralised by the effort required to improve.

I can sympathise with that drive, at least. After all, I'm a pretty mediocre writer. I desperately wish I could be better, but I am so far away from where I'd like to be that it feels hopeless sometimes.

Sometimes I wish that I believed that it actually was hopeless, because then I could just give up on trying rather than having to bear the pain of practicing my way out of mediocrity. However, I care more about improving than I do about my discomfort, and so I keep going with the XP grind.

A big thing that keeps me going is that I have seen the power of practice. I'm still far from where I'd like to be (and no doubt when I reach that point, my ambition will have grown along with my skill such that I will still be satisfied), but I'm able to look back on my efforts of the last few years and see real progress.

That's why I find people who use generative AI to be quite tragic — they're like alternate timeline versions of myself. It's more comfortable to believe that the reason you're not good at things is because there are people who are Good at it, and people who are Bad at it. If it's a case of immutable categories of capability, then you have an excuse not to try. What's especially tragic is that when these demoralised novices use generative AI, that's often because they still have that drive to create inside themselves.

But man, it sucks to see, because I know that they will never find the satisfaction they crave in these tools. Sure, they might make something they're proud of, giving them a facsimile of fulfillment — but it won't compare to what they could be feeling. When I argue against generative AI, I'm not just being anti-AI, but pro-Art. Actually, no, it's more than that — I'm pro-passion. If they could cultivate the kind of vulnerability required to actually use and develop their inner passion, then I would treasure any piece of art or writing generated through that process. I might not enjoy the art itself, in its own right, but I don't need to, because what I love most about art is that it's a fundamentally human process, and so any creative work is best enjoyed with that context

Ugh, it drives me mad. I just want to grab them by the shoulders and shake them, while yelling "PLEASE COME AND JOIN US. I GENUINELY WANT TO SEE WHAT PASSIONS DRIVE YOUR URGE TO CREATE. I KNOW IT HURTS TO BE MEDIOCRE, BUT YOUR PASSIONS ARE WORTH PERSISTING FOR. WE'VE ALL BEEN THERE, AND WE WANT YOU HERE WITH US SO THAT WE CAN HELP SUPPORT YOU". Alas, screaming at someone like this is not an effective evangelisation strategy — even if you tell them that we throw better parties, and that they're invited

18

Oh, it gets so much more entertaining than this.

  • Competent artists I know say that degenerative AI will never be able to do art, but they think it may be fine someday for writing or coding or such.
  • Competent writers I know laugh at degenerative AI's ever replacing them, but are pretty sure that someday it may replace coders or musicians.
  • Competent coders I know shake their heads at even the very thought of degenerative AIs replacing them for anything more than rote work, but acknowledge that they'd likely be fine for music or art.
  • Competent musicians laugh at the prospect of degenerative AIs ever making decent music, but nod sagely that it's probably fine for art or writing.

It's like a circle jerk of Gell-Mann.

14
lemmy.world

As an artist myself, when it comes to generated images, it's weird and uncanny with the mistakes it makes.

It's not the kinds of things a below average artist gets wrong, image gen gets things wrong in very specific ways. It aims for perfection on everything, but unlike a human, the algorithm has no understanding of what it's trying to make.

If a below average artist makes mistakes, I still have a pretty good idea what they're going for, because a human working on art has some real world understanding that every other human has, a big one being object persistence.

13

No matter how rudimentary one is at art, a human will always understand that things in the background are independent of things in the middle and foreground. AI's obsession with making everything symmetric and balanced always results in the most repulsive uncanny valley looking slop. About the only thing it comes close to getting is abstract patterns but anyone can do the same thing with 25 year old software.

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hperrinreply
lemmy.ca

Yeah, the mistakes it makes are often different, but it makes mistakes in details just like a below average artist. The most common mistakes I see in real artists are things like inconsistent lighting, proportions, perspective, etc, and the AI can usually do those things alright, but it struggles with other details, like consistent anatomy, shapes, materials, etc.

It’s similar in code. Like, a human being isn’t going to add a dependency that doesn’t exist, but that’s the kind of mistake an AI will make all the time. Some mistakes, like removing a function call it’s not supposed to to fix a failing test case, are mistakes a human would make, just like humans make anatomical mistakes in art all the time too.

So it’s not that the AI makes the exact same mistakes a below average human makes, but more about how often it makes mistakes, just like a below average human does.

3

My favourite clue for degenerative AI "art" is something occluded by something else. Like, say, a pipe blocked partially by a ... tree. Whatever.

Nine times out of ten the pipe doesn't come out the other side, or comes out the other side offset from the entrance point, or comes out the other side completely different, or ...

3

I think as far as software development goes, a large amount of people are not creating innovative work. For most corporate jobs AI or human slop is good enough. The ramifications of not writing it themselves and learning as they go is problematic and eventually we will not have people with enough experience to be in senior roles, where the experience and intuition is a must. That being said, it's very understandable to use a tool that lets you cruise through a job that pays 80k annual salary with benefits.

12
fedia.io

There's definitely a correlation between the understanding/misunderstanding of what it does and the understanding/misunderstanding of what it's capable of.

If you understand even the basics of how an LLM works you understand that it's not capable of much more than mediocre at a consistent level because even with the best possible training data and a lack of bad training data it's ability to"hallucinate" is based on how incomplete the data set it's trained on is.

When it "hallucinates" it does so because it doesn't have a direct answer it can generate for whatever query is given. This is because humans can't generate a complete data set of everything that is without flaw.

So they are as average as we are if we do not attempt to better ourselves. The difference is that they can't better themselves because they do not learn. And even further than that, we can try to better the training data, but they still lack the ability to understand anything including context which makes it a useless task. The man power of humans working together might be able to get pretty close to a training set that would raise an AI LLM above the average human, but the LLM can't maintain that trajectory by itself and literally nothing else would get done.

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lemmy.world

Jesus fucking christ dude I can see why you were so offended by my comments about overly confident people on both sides of the argument being wrong. This is complete nonsense you are just making up.

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fedia.io

Offended? Darling. I don't care about you other than I find you amusing. So edgy. So angry.

And you went as far as to stalk my comments. Obsessed much?

6
lemmy.world

Darling. I don’t care about you other than I find you amusing. So edgy. So angry.

Well that is an interesting thing to say... Anyways are you going to address that you have just made all this up on the spot there is no reason to be this confidently incorrect and painfully bellow average.

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fedia.io

I'm not your therapist, bud. You could have ended this "discussion" at any time. You continue to choose to engage me. I don't know what you're expecting but like. You aren't even good at being annoying. That's why you're so funny.

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fedia.io

I'm not the one quoting his twitter posts in my username. But nice try at trying to psychoanalyze me.

5

It wasn't deep it was just that you both seem to be reality challenged. Buddy I "psychoanalyzed" you a while ago when I said you were projecting your feelings.

But are you going to address that you are just making shit up? Or are you just going to be mad I challenged your safe space echo chamber?

0

my older bro who was in tech just starting using the slop machine like last year, he think its great, and thinks the answer to anyone asking him a question is chatgpt, think for yourself, and also AI generated picture from an actual PHOTO too.

10

I had someone tell me it allowed them to "make the best app they've ever made". It was a bootstrap CRUD task app.

9

I think people usually use genAI to cut corners. Rather than learn the skill themselves (and develop the sense of what makes the result good/bad), they just go with the zero-effort option.

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lemmy.world

I know some intelligent and artistic people who use AI, and some lazy people at well. I know folks who have niche intelligence and general intelligence who use it and don't. It's almost like literally everything else, where subsets of the population will either use it or not use it, and the "it" itself is not some determining factor in deciding the value of a person.

This thread is just another Lemmy superiority circle jerk, but hey, here we are. So jerk away guys.

I also don't use it, don't like it, but I also don't judge people based on whether or not they use it, because I do plenty worth judging myself.

6

This isn’t about people who merely use it. It’s about people who love it and praise it. I use it, but I also understand how terrible it is at everything it does, so I use it sparingly and in very specific contexts.

8

"I know some intelligent and artistic people who use AI" lol no you don't fuck off

-1

Wow, yes. I think it goes both ways though, relying on the AI for the human part of your work (design, writing) makes you more stupid. But yes my direct boss is an Elon fanboy, ChatGPT devotee and his thinking is slow. He's not exactly stupid, there is stuff he's good at, but doesn't quickly make connections, and it sure seems like it's related to the ChatGPT.

6

I've never met a real human person that loves AI. I've used it in very specific circumstances. I've met other people who've used it. But every one of those people share some variation of my opinion - It's useful for very few things and trash for the 99% of other things. I don't know who these lovers of AI are but I bet it's the same handful of idiots who all run in one or two social circles reinforcing each other's opinions on everything. If a person's ideas can't be challenged or they surround themselves with people exactly like themselves their minds are doomed to atrophy. Humans are coded to save energy. Talent and skill takes long grueling effort. AI allows the lazy to phone it in which allows the midiocre to cosplay as the talented. But AI is a tool. For people with reading/writing difficulties it can bridge gaps that previously required much more effort and many more resources. That independence has value, but AI is not a replacement for the novelist. Anyone who says that the sun shines out of AI's ass or the sun never sets on AI or whatever BS they're spouting is either a snake oil salesman or their mark. Neither should be given much oxygen.

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lemmy.zip

The only person around me (that I know) that uses AI is me and the company mechanic. I only ever use it as an easier 'image search' to find the source of manga/anime or similar things. He only uses it to figure out what brand/model machine he needs to work on so he uses it to find the manual pdfs.

I feel like we're using it the 'right way,' but I feel like we're not actually using the AI part so...

6
bthestreply
lemmy.world

Sounds like you're both using a search engine that has the word "AI" slapped on it.

15

Yeah, I use it through gemini (only cause pixel and bottom button press is easy) and he (unfortunately 🤮) uses grok, but we (or at least I do) only use it for image/object recognition. Really useful for that at least, although again, calling it AI might be a misnomer.

4

It's not the same if scientists use AI as tool to create new materials, vaccines, genetics and in other investigations, solving problems which in traditional manner with millons of data need a lot of years, or an dumb user got even dumber, substituting the own creativity and intelligence with an AI app. AI can be an usefull tool for certain tasks, no an substitute for human capabilities. The problem with AI is this, not the AI as such, but it's abuse, to convert it to an hype, to obtain user data by big corps, to manipulate and control decisions. The correct use of AI need human intelligence.

5

The same people who love AI are those that also loved the Magic 8-ball.

5
hperrinreply
lemmy.ca

I’m sure the lawyers are very excited about all of this. It’s an absolutely wonderful time to be a copyright attorney. We’re going to have lots of lawsuits regarding all the AI generated copyright infringement.

3
stringerereply
sh.itjust.works

AI capital will be spent to undo copyright law or carve out exemptions. They cannot be beholden to the same rules as us lowly plebians.

3
hperrinreply
lemmy.ca

Unfortunately, you’re probably right.

1

I'm getting really tired of it. I wish I was wrong more often about this kind of thing.

2
lemmy.today

It's not going to stay this way for much longer. Technology progresses exponentially and in a decade or two at most AI will be able to outperform all humans in everything. The future is dark unless it's all unplugged.

-2
lemmy.world

This is absolutely not true. Technology progression being exponentially improving is a lie movies have taught you. There are real physical limits to what every technology can do. The current generation of AI hallucinates as a fundamental property of how they work. You're not going to get rid of that.

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lemmy.ml

You're thinking of Moore's Law which only applies/refers to processing power and is also not actually a law of any kind

5
lemmy.ml

Yes you absolutely are talking about Moore's Law, the article you linked here says so explicitly, if you'd bothered reading the goddamned thing you'd know that

0

I did, it's a bunch of bullshit that doesn't in any way substantiate the claims being presented.

-2
lemmy.world

Imagine an army of high school seniors at your command - what could you do? Very likely you'll spend a good amount of time babysitting but you could probably mentor one or two into doing something interesting and with all the rest you could get mediocre book reports. That's not nothing. Is it amazing art, no. Incredible writing, no. Truly new or interesting ideas, also probably no. Can you get a lot of stuff done that is pretty boring and repetitive - yes. And I mean a lot, no sleep or breaks, just boring repetitive tasks.

I think one of the biggest miscalculations right now is how many of those tasks there are that actually need doing. It's more than a lot of people might guess, so many forms, shuffling of data, and other burecratic BS that we just don't really need people to do now. On the other hand, a lot of those forms need to be analyzed or data that needs to be understood but is that really all that much? Idk. I do think AI art misses the point but an army of high school seniors, wielded by someone with the skills and understanding to tackle a real problem can be remarkably effective.

All this to say, hype people gonna hype but other actually smart people are quietly learning how to wield "AI".

-6

The problem is, if it's repetitive enough we can already automate it without AI, and if it isn't, AI will make enough boneheaded mistakes that it needs proofreading.

I do expect that proofreading will become easier over time as we all get a better idea of what sort of mistakes the AI makes. So we might actually start to improve productivity, in a sheer volume sorta way.

However, proofreading a lot of mediocre work is basically what teachers marking assignments do. If you want to know how bad that would be as a full-time job, ask a teacher how much they like marking assignments compared to the rest of their work, and then look at how much they like their job overall.

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hperrinreply
lemmy.ca

Well I guarantee you I couldn’t get a project with actually good code. I should know, I started writing code at 10, and by the time I was a high school senior, I was still pretty dog shit at it. That was 20 years ago, so I’m a bit better at it now.

7
lemmy.world

You people are going to get so left behind 🤷‍♂️. The smugness of this post 🤣.

-15
Retail4068reply
lemmy.world

Maybe your not as  observant as you think. It won't be immediate change and it'll start by missing promotions and raises.

0
discuss.tchncs.de

So you're saying I will get more promotions by deskilling myself? Yeah, sure, that makes sense...

2
Retail4068reply
lemmy.world

Ahhhhhhhh look at me I've lost the ability to read code!!!!!! The AI stole my powers! It's space jam 3 ai invasion!!!!!

Here's a hint for you in life. Very very few employers hire employees for their ability to quickly sort a tree or other highly technical problems. They are hired for their ability to translate business needs into tech while dealing with whatever arbitrary constraints while not being a screeching dick about it. And this only becomes more true as you get more senior roles.

My job as a lead, staff engineer, and eventually director involves far more pull requests, teaching, getting nerds to stop screeching at each other and talking through shit. To ask do we even need to do this work.

I still code better than most of my juniors. I still understand AWS better then them. But I'm not doing 95% of the code.

0

Ahhhhhhhh look at me I’ve lost the ability to read code!!!

Pretending that skill atrophy isn't a real issue doesn't make it go away. The more a developer outsources his brain to an LLM, the more skills they lose over time. I experienced it first hand, because I wasn't always so strictly against "AI" and used it extensively for many months. But I noticed that I wasn't able to solve pretty simple coding tasks after a while anymore, tasks which were second nature to me before. Anyone who mindlessly boosts AI without even taking this into consideration, isn't a good developer.

I still code better than most of my juniors.

This statement is a nothingburger. You can't hype yourself up to make yourself more legitimate, anyone can just claim things on the internet. In order to assess if you are truly a good coder, another senior who doesn't use AI would have to look over your code. The results might surprise you.

I'll leave it at that, you completely jumped on the hypetrain, you aren't even interested in a real discussion and my time is too valuable to spend it on such trivialities. I just feel sorry for the juniors working under your management and I hope you'll not be out of a job when OpenAI, Anthropic and all of the other big "AI" companies eventually go down the drain.

2
lemmy.world

The people overly confident in either direction are painfully below average, AI broskis or fuck-AI regulars. Two sides of the same coin.

-17
fedia.io

lol. You don't offer anything meaningful. You don't seem to be trying to push a reasoned argument or anything. You're just full of piss and vinegar, railing against an "echo chamber" with insults instead of facts.

Is this cathartic for you? Because the people here are laughing at you.

6
lemmy.world

Are you sure because it seems my point about both fuck AI and AI broskis being overly confident, painfully below average has great meaning to you.

-2
fedia.io

I think you're an adorable little troll and I'm pretty positive they're laughing at you just based on the fact that nobody but me is actually talking to you. You seem incredibly angry. I'm amused that you've entered an echo chamber to troll. Because your actions show you're not here to change minds or argue.

You're here to get a rise out of people. Your increased vitriol shows that. You're welcome to try to spin it as an after thought to mean something you didn't initial say (and I don't believe you mean), but like. There's plenty of people in this "echo chamber" who talk about the benefits of Gen AI. You could engage those people in conversation. Instead you came in with "fuck you anti-ai rubes" which is like ... so entry level troll that I can only conclude that you're new to this.

I don't have a stake in your motives, but also, I was curious because this isn't the first time I have seen you here trying to play troll.

6

Christ dude get a grip on reality you are way too confident in your ability to see through monitors. That is your reflection you cannot see through monitors that isn't how it works. You are transparently projecting your feelings onto me. But I am happy for you to talk about yourself some more:

-5