> "every line a hard-fought battle" style that really makes you understand why and how something works
Absolutely true. However:
The real value of AI will be to *be aware* when at that local optimum, and then - if unable to find a way forward - at least reliably notify the user that that is indeed the case.
Bottom line, the number of engineering “hard thought battles” is finite, and should be chosen very wisely.
The performance multiplier that LLM agents brought changed the world. At least as the consumer web did in the 90s, and there will be no turning back.
This is like a computer company around 1980, would be hiring engineers but forbade access to computers for some numerical task.
Funny, it reminds me the reason Konami MSX1 games look like they do, compared to the most of the competition: having access to superior development tools - their HP hardware emulator workstations.
If you are unable to come up with a filter for your applicants that is able to detect your own product, maybe you should evolve. What about asking an AI how to solve this? ;)
Absolutely true. However:
The real value of AI will be to *be aware* when at that local optimum, and then - if unable to find a way forward - at least reliably notify the user that that is indeed the case.
Bottom line, the number of engineering “hard thought battles” is finite, and should be chosen very wisely.
The performance multiplier that LLM agents brought changed the world. At least as the consumer web did in the 90s, and there will be no turning back.
This is like a computer company around 1980, would be hiring engineers but forbade access to computers for some numerical task.
Funny, it reminds me the reason Konami MSX1 games look like they do, compared to the most of the competition: having access to superior development tools - their HP hardware emulator workstations.
If you are unable to come up with a filter for your applicants that is able to detect your own product, maybe you should evolve. What about asking an AI how to solve this? ;)