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Posted by koshyjohn 20 hours ago

AI should elevate your thinking, not replace it(www.koshyjohn.com)
690 points | 492 commentspage 7
protocolture 15 hours ago|
This is why I feel like its fine that AI stay as inaccurate as it is.

I learn so much arguing with it.

woeirua 16 hours ago||
I don’t get why we shouldn’t outsource our thinking to the AI. As it becomes more capable, eventually it will be more competent than the average engineer. At that point companies should be _requiring_ the AI to make the larger decisions. By the end of this year AI might be better than all but the very best engineers. Then what?
apsurd 16 hours ago|
that's a lot of speculation based on one year of data. We don't actually have the results yet, is the main issue as i understand.
bilsbie 18 hours ago||
It’s weird I have basically a free private tutor in any subject and I use it a lot.

Yet nothing has actually changed.

hpbc5 19 hours ago||
Theory of Bounded Rationality and its implications is something they should teach everyone.
koshyjohn 15 hours ago|
Thank you for sharing this. We are all less rational than we imagine ourselves to be, even if we're hyper-critical of ourselves and exercise a lot of intellectual humility.
fermatf 19 hours ago||
For couple of last weeks, I use AI to speedup my thinking process. Instead of think about something to come up to conclusion, I let AI brainstorm for me and then select. Not for everything, but I found it faster with AI. Having taste on select the ai output is important though.
poszlem 5 hours ago||
"What do such machines really do? They increase the number of things we can do without thinking. Things we do without thinking-there's the real danger" - Frank Herbert, God Emperor of Dune
mrdootdoot 18 hours ago||
I’ve never been busier and more challenged than I am now.
naveen99 18 hours ago||
Employees should elevate your thinking not replace it.
zulux 20 hours ago||
Yes.... and I can't think without compiled languages. Missed out on assembler.

Becoming dependent on a technology is to be expected. I'm pretty sure 95% of us are dependent on packaged meat and don't know how to hunt.

awepofiwaop 20 hours ago|
I'm seeing plenty of internal work where I ask someone about their code, they ask Claude, and reply with "Claude says...".

That's substantively different than going from assembly to C.

ben_w 20 hours ago|||
Every time things change, the change itself is different.

I remember some of my earlier issues with various languages. `Dim A, B as Int`, in VisualBasic one of them is an Int the other is a Variant, in REALbasic (now Xojo) they're both Int. `MyClass *foo = nil; [foo bar];` isn't an error in ObjC because sending a message to nil is a no-op.

Or how, back when I was a complete beginner, if I forgot a semicolon in Metrowerks, the compiler would tell me about errors on every line after (but not including!) the one where I forgot the semicolon.

"Docs say", "Compiler says", "StackOverflow says", "Wikipedia says"; either this tool is good enough or it isn't; it not being good enough means we're still paid to do the thing it can't do, that only stops when nobody needs to because it can do the thing. The overlap, when people lean on it before the paint is dry, is just a time for quick-and-dirty. LLMs are in the wet-paint/quick-and-dirty phase. You could get suff done by copy-pasting code you didn't understand from StackOverflow, but you couldn't build a career from that alone. LLMs are better than StackOverflow, but still not a full replacement for SWeng, not yet.

puapuapuq 20 hours ago|||
I am that someone thinking why you can't ask Claude yourself.
koshyjohn 15 hours ago|||
The better question may be "What value did that person acting as a glorified front-end for Claude create?" (vs. what they were expected to).
awepofiwaop 14 hours ago|||
I wasn't really interested in asking Claude myself, because I wasn't really able to verify the claims being made so it's just noise. I'd hoped that the person who had written the code and put it up for review would be able to.
sharts 20 hours ago|
Meh, there’s plenty that rise in their careers while being mediocre.
joe_mamba 20 hours ago|
The tech industry lost the plot when SCRUM Masters and AGILE coaches were highly paid con-men to waste everyone's time and add no value while raking in the coal. AI doesn't impact something already broken.
operatingthetan 20 hours ago||
When was tech not bureaucratic and political?
joe_mamba 20 hours ago||
60's, 70's, 80's, 90's, basically before the Google and Meta found out ads and money printing run the world, and after the tech industry was run by nerds with mullets, New Balance sneakers and khaki shorts.
operatingthetan 20 hours ago||
Oracle, HP, Microsoft, Cisco, IBM, Apple, Xerox and countless other names were internally bureaucratic and political in the 80's and 90's. Like famously so.
joe_mamba 20 hours ago||
Every single one of those companies you mentioned was lean, agile and run by skilled motivated nerds with mullets and thick glasses in the beginning when they started in a garage.

And every single major company becomes bureaucratic and political after 30+ years in the business when the original founders are long retired, and the Wall Street friendly beancounters take over, caring only about the quarterly reports.

operatingthetan 19 hours ago||
You are changing your argument by adding this: "when they started in a garage."

'Lean agile' tech companies are by far the exception, not the rule.

Look at OpenAI and Anthropic, both fairly new companies that are excessively political already. This 'garage stage' of lacking politics is a myth, read old stories about Microsoft, when it was 15 people it was political.

joe_mamba 16 hours ago||
>You are changing your argument by adding this: "when they started in a garage."

No, you are.

You first asked: "When was tech not bureaucratic and political?"

To which I replied "in the 60's, 70's, 80's, 90's when they started in garages".

What did you fail to understand here?

>Look at OpenAI and Anthropic, both fairly new companies that are excessively political already.

Everything becomes political when you tell them they're worth trillions if they only play the right tune. Money brings out the worst in people. SW companies didn't make trillions decades ago.

operatingthetan 16 hours ago||
Why did you just lie about what you wrote?

What you actually wrote in the comment four hours ago:

>60's, 70's, 80's, 90's, basically before the Google and Meta found out ads and money printing run the world

Your lie just now:

>To which I replied "in the 60's, 70's, 80's, 90's when they started in garages".

---

>What did you fail to understand here?

Nothing because you never said it. Wild behavior.

joe_mamba 15 hours ago||
>Nothing because you never said it.

You literally just quoted me saying before two comments above: "You are changing your argument by adding this: "when they started in a garage." and then pretend otherwise.

Now you're pretending I never said and acting like you didn't read it.

Are you unable to understand an argument made by adding the context of two sentence from two consecutive comments following up on each other(which you yourself quoted and said it changes the argument), or are you just a troll acting in bad faith pretending you can't understand just to score a cheap gotcha?

>Wild behavior.

Yes you have, which is why I'll stop replying to you now, to protect my sanity. Jesus Christ.

operatingthetan 15 hours ago||
You made up a quote you never said and insisted that you said it, argument over, you lose. And no, you can't take little pieces of several of your comments and smash them together and pretend like that was the context all along. Bizarre behavior. Please read more about how this site works, this isn't acceptable.
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