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by darkteflon 1158 days ago
This has been my experience too. I’ve seen a few responses in here comparing time-to-write x lines of code alone vs with GPT, but imo it’s not that stuff that makes the biggest difference (although I do like that stuff too).

If creating something complex and novel (for you, at least) is to be constantly pushing at the edges of what you know, your ability to progress that work is gated by a constant flow of challenges that are - to you - insurmountable without the right knowledge. Whether it’s an incantation or a mental model or whatever: you need that key to open that gate.

ChatGPT - and I want to confine my claims to GPT4 because I have found it much better than Turbo3.5 in this regard - is a tool that has the potential to take each of those gates, and tell you - converse with you until you understand - what you need to, to progress. That feels incredibly powerful, and I wouldn’t hesitate to call that a 10x improvement for those - very common - scenarios.

As a result, I have found the same thing happening that Simon Willison has been talking about - and that parent also mentioned: you’re in a position to tackle a much wider array of challenges than before. Stuff you would’ve written off as too time-consuming is suddenly a few minutes work.

I dunno, to me, this whole experience is completely magical. Honestly can’t understand how people remain underwhelmed by what’s happening. I always want to say “hey, look over here! This is _amazing_!”

I think we’re still in the stage where people are figuring out how to use a powerful new tool, and there’s quite a bit of “trying to drill holes with a hammer”. For the types of job at which this particular tool excels, until now we’ve largely had to do it by hand.