|
|
|
|
|
by jonahx
829 days ago
|
|
The problem is that you still need a human in the loop to determine if you're in the 13% success bucket, or 87% failure bucket, and the time it takes to make that determination is still a significant fraction of just solving the problem. So the actual value here is not "13% of all issues fixed for the cost of compute," but more like "a discount on human time for 13% of the issues". But you also have to factor in the time taken on the 87% of issues where leading you down a wrong path can be adding time versus human only. It's not clear to me how it all shakes out, and would require large-sample experiments with humans to determine. I would bet the final margins are small though. |
|