• frongt@lemmy.zip
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    19 hours ago

    If you spend that much effort, you might just do it without AI. Same amount of work, and you know it’s not going to have non-deterministic behavior.

    • partofthevoice@lemmy.zip
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      16 hours ago

      Well, I’d be spending that work on a re-usable platform / framework. So if the argument is “it’s as much work as doing the work yourself anyway,” then I think it may be worth it.

      Same argument we had for building the SQL engine. It’s a lot of work upfront but maybe we can benefit from its functionality for long after that.

      I wouldn’t be building a project-scoped work harness. I’d be building a work harness for projects.

      Edit: downvote me all you want. The comparison to the SQL engine was a good one.

      It’s about increasing the baseline of readily-available information, boiler-plate, test data, POCs… between the times (T1) that I have an idea and (T2) that I’m ready to start working on that idea. It’s not about having the agent do the work. Not at all. That’s a static benefit which is created once then reused countless times for the foreseeable future — like SQL.

    • yucandu@lemmy.world
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      15 hours ago

      without AI. Same amount of work

      You want me to write an entire library for a brand new sensor that just came off the market, by parsing through and reading a hundred page datasheet manual, understanding i2c or SPI communication timings, configuration packets, etc…

      When I can just drag and drop the PDF into ChatGPT and say “make a library for this sensor” and it spits out something that has been working without issue for the past 2 years?

      Why? Why would I be that stupid?

      • Miaou@jlai.lu
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        13 hours ago

        I hear crazy claims like this but haven’t seen anything close to this with my own eyes (yet).

        I shudder at the idea that SPI or i2c are considered complex for someone supposed to interact with hardware. What will you do if a problem arises and you don’t even know which pin does what?