I'd call it culture wars.
I disagree in my culture nothing I said was out of line or even odd. It would be like me getting upset at you for expressing things you find odd in your culture.
I'd call it culture wars.
zester It seems that it is customary in your culture to insult others.It must be a European thing,
Perhaps the reason is that you expend too much time at work with top engineers and do not have contact with normal people.
zester It seems that it is customary in your culture to insult others.
I have very frequently the experience that some people get offended when they meet someone more intelligent than them. I can imagine that people acting that way, and so stupid to also personalize AI, do get upset.
people get offended when they meet someone more intelligent than them.
Ahh, zester could it be that you are just a little too much emotionalized?clearly your reading comprehension is shit.
Indeed, and that speaks against your principle of writing documentation before coding.Engineering is an end product of thinking while programming.
Yes, *this*. And if we let models write too much code for us, or do too much of our thinking, we lose this edge.
Perhaps most of the time humans are processing patterns, from the very beginning of their life.Creativity is effectively the threshold of artificial general intelligence: the point where a machine is no longer just processing patterns, but producing ideas in the same sense humans do.
Perhaps most of the time humans are processing patterns, from the very beginning of their life.
These LLM have something called "temperature", if it is 0, it is deterministic, selects as next word the one with highest assigned probability, as temperature is increased, it may select other word, the higher, the more words with less probability. In the extreme case, delirium, non sense, noise comes out.
In few words: creativity increases with chaos, extreme creativity means speaking nonsense.
Perhaps too complicated for today's AI, but it is also pattern matching, the phrase "code documentation system" is a pattern, otherwise it would not exist, and new means apply chaos to find something else than the "c++ code documentation systems" that exist.Then that nonsense starts to evolve and converges into meaning. I am curios what AI would come up with If I asked it to create a new c++ code documentation system.
Irrelevant to the theme here.the "prompt" for this image is "dr house diagnosing tony soprano with lupus". you want to trust this system, which cannot keep these two men separate, to write documentation that has to be both correct and meaningful to humans? really?
you open by claiming that it's good because now you don't have to learn troff. seriously?Irrelevant to the theme here.
Image analysis and generation is a different issue.Proving the shortcomings of AI is relevant here.
No, but because I see how fast it recognized what program do and write down documentation that I would never have written because I do not want to expend to much time on it. If it makes errors, it corrects it in a dialog. It is a nice way to do the job. I told that 1000 times. AI would have understood it, you still do not get it. I you were the one that writes documentation and I were your chef, I would fire you because you do not get it.you open by claiming that it's good because now you don't have to learn troff. seriously?
Image analysis and generation is a different issue.
what?No, but because I see how fast it recognized what program do and write down documentation that I would never have written because I do not want to expend to much time on it. If it makes errors, it corrects it in a dialog. It is a nice way to do the job. I told that 1000 times. AI would have understood it, you still do not get it. I you were the one that writes documentation and I were your chef, I would fire you because you do not get it.
theconversation.com
I was looking into an obvious ../.. vulnerability introduced into a major web framework today, and it was committed by username Claude on GitHub. Vibe coded, basically.
So I started looking through Claude commits on GitHub, there’s over 2m of them and it’s about 5% of all open source code this month.
As I looked through the code I saw the same class of vulns being introduced over, and over, again - several a minute.