AI for writing documentation

my man, we have a stack of RFCs printed out that we reference on a regular basis, you are barking up the wrong tree entirely. maybe you should spend time engaging with the actual material instead of delegating understanding to the slop machine.
 
Why exactly do you think I ask questions about RFC documents for? (and of course I ask such questions only after reading the complete thing, duh.) Ok, I'm really tired reading you. I'm here for only a few weeks, and I think I haven't seen a single message written by you that wasn't obvious bad faith. You're really not interesting.
 
huge thing that makes us not want to deal with any of this garbage is that most of its purveyors can't take a "no", and have to give us this pushy hard sell that sounds like it's coming from a wild-eyed zealot trying to get us hooked on his supply. it's creepy.
 
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You're the only zealot here, dumping your hate on every thread discussing AI, usually with low effort dismissive one-liners (which is rich, coming from someone complaining about slop - AI slop from genAI is indeed a problem, but not as big a problem than *your* slop). As all haters, whatever the object of their hate, you're completely defined by it, because hate is an obsession. You can't help pursuing it.

Now, don't worry, you won't have to suffer ever again seeing me disturbing your hate, because I'm adding you to my ignore list. I'm not interested in reading anything from you. I didn't leave social networks just to be exposed yet again to a constant stream of hate in a technical forum. I'm letting you know so that you don't find yourself ever waiting for a reply from me.
 
the extra cool part is that there's no way to prove if any of the code came from, say, GPL or proprietary sources, which, i'm sure, is going to result in 0 additional problems besides all of the other problems with slop code. :)
 
the extra cool part is that there's no way to prove if any of the code came from, say, GPL or proprietary sources, which, i'm sure, is going to result in 0 additional problems besides all of the other problems with slop code. :)
Besides, does an AI have an interest in anything at all? All the licenses/rules/permissions/laws are made by humans who have an interest in profit. I mean, a reasonable human mind can possibly conclude that an AI might be interested in RAM, electrical power, and related stuff - but that's only the case when there are humans around that are interested in stuff. On its own, an AI is nothing more than a pile of poisonous rare earths and metal, and can't possibly want or care for anything... not even GPL code.
 
What's the point to ask an AI to write something that you'll need te re-read and correct ? I still don't understand the hype around this thing, just losing time and giving money to tech merchants. Writing docs IS part of the coding/operating a software, we just lost it. Take any 80's software, any hardware came with a solid manual, so were the games too. There was no "AI" doing this, the manuals were excellent and the translations were perfect.
I document almost each line of the code I write, by hand, just like dinosaurs did. But if I write a variable is a integer, IT IS an integer ; I don't give a robot the risk to mistakenly write it's a string. Kind of very small errors that could break everything. "Real" human professionnal translators do know it, if you translate a big company contract to another language and you use only a small wrong word, that's a big hole that could ruin the company. An IA will not care about this.
 
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