• rottingleaf@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    you can put out an idea in plain language, and get back code that just “does” it

    No you can’t. Simplifying it grossly:

    They can’t do the most low-level, dumbest detail, splitting hairs, “there’s no spoon”, “this is just correct no matter how much you blabber in the opposite direction, this is just wrong no matter how much you blabber to support it” kind of solutions.

    And that happens to be main requirement that makes a task worth software developer’s time.

    We need software developers to write computer programs, because “a general idea” even in a formalized language is not sufficient, you need to address details of actual reality. That is the bottleneck.

    That technology widens the passage in the places which were not the bottleneck in the first place.

    • TropicalDingdong@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      I think you live in a nonsense world. I literally use it everyday and yes, sometimes it’s shit and it’s bad at anything that even requires a modicum of creativity. But 90% of shit doesn’t require a modicum of creativity. And my point isn’t about where we’re at, it’s about how far the same tech progressed on another domain adjacent task in three years.

      Lemmy has a “dismiss AI” fetish and does so at its own peril.

      • rottingleaf@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        Are you a software developer? Or a hardware engineer? EDIT: Or anyone credible in evaluating my nonsense world against yours?

          • hark@lemmy.world
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            3 months ago

            That explains your optimism. Code generation is at a stage where it slaps together Stack Overflow answers and code ripped off from GitHub for you. While that is quite effective to get at least a crappy programmer to cobble together something that barely works, it is a far cry from having just anyone put out an idea in plain language and getting back code that just does it. A programmer is still needed in the loop.

            I’m sure I don’t have to explain to you that AI development over the decades has often reached plateaus where the approach needed to be significantly changed in order for progress to be made, but it could certainly be the case where LLMs (at least as they are developed now) aren’t enough to accomplish what you describe.