• locuester@lemmy.zip
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    2
    arrow-down
    4
    ·
    3 hours ago

    That article is from January. This space moves too fast. It’s not worth reading. I thought things still sucked in Jan too. But they’re impressive af now.

    • ugo@feddit.it
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      2
      arrow-down
      1
      ·
      1 hour ago

      I’m sorry to say this is a garbage take. I have been told “6 months ago things sucked, but they are amazing now” for like 2 years.

      When chatgpt4 came out I was told it was amazing and that 6 months old models sucked.

      Nowadays I use chatgpt4 and it produces garbage and I get told “yeah but chatgpt4 is garbage”. Well, it was supposedly amazing 6 months ago and my work is still the same and the codebase is mostly the same.

      This is called bullshitting. This stuff isn’t amazing now and it wasn’t amazing 6 months ago.

      • locuester@lemmy.zip
        link
        fedilink
        English
        arrow-up
        2
        ·
        edit-2
        45 minutes ago

        I realize you aren’t happy about it. But it’s true.

        I was basically born behind a computer in 1978. Been a fulltime software dev since 1998.

        What the latest models are doing is nothing short of incredible. And in 6 months the current models will suck compared to the latest.

        Somewhere around Feb is when things really shifted for me personally. I can do all home sys and net admin tasks now by just asking a bot, running a LOCAL model. Frontier models can whip up apps in minutes.

        It does require dev/architect knowledge to get quality. You have to understand the broad solution, then just get ai to do the grunt work.

        I wrote all 4 of these this week, 100% ai code. I wouldn’t have had the time to write the first three, but it (opus 4.6 I think) oneshot them all in a couple mins:

        Homey apps:

        Other:

        Do these repos have bugs? Yep probably. But they’re working today for me solving my problems.

        The same applies on large repos where I do work. When properly guided by a high skill dev/architect, the results are profound. Even non code stuff like terraform and ansible.

        Given proper direction, an LLM allows you to perform at a much higher level.

    • zbyte64@awful.systems
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      2
      arrow-down
      1
      ·
      1 hour ago

      It’s impressive until it isn’t because it decided to “fix” an issue by simply ignoring an exception.