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by hn_throwaway_99
1177 days ago
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Please give some examples then. I've found the GPT-4 version to be remarkably accurate, and when it makes mistakes it's not hard to spot them. For example, I commented last week that I've found ChatGPT to be a great tool for managing my task list, and for whatever reason the "verbal" back-and-forth works much better for my brain than a simple checklist-based todo app: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=35390644 . But, I also pointed out how it will get the sums for my "task estimate totals by group" wrong. But it's so easy to see this mistake, and after using it for a while I have a good understanding for when it's likely to occur, that it doesn't lessen the value I get from using the tool. |
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The code in the post is wrong. For this "trivial" example, if you just blindly copied it into your code, it would not do what you want it to do. I love this example not just because it's ironic, but because it's a perfect illustration of how you need to know the answer before you ask for the solution. If you don't know what you're doing, you're gonna have a bad time.
I'm not at all concerned about the value of programmers falling to zero. I'm concerned that a lot of bad programmers are going to get their pants pulled down.
[1] https://skventures.substack.com/p/societys-technical-debt-an...
(Edit: and as a totally hot take, while I'm not worried about good programmers, I think the marginal value of multi-thousand word, think-piece blogposts is rapidly falling to zero. Who needs to pay Paul Kedrosky and Eric Norlon to write silly, incorrect articles, when ChatGPT will do it for free?)