| > I've been doing this for 25 years and everything I do can be boiled down to API Glue. Oooof, and you still haven't learned how big this field is? Give me the ego of a software developer who thinks they've seen it all in a field that changes almost daily. Lol. > The basic stuff has been the same for two decades now. hwut? > Maybe 5% of the code I write is actually hard, like when the stuff comes in REAL fast and you need to do the processing within a time limit God, the irony in saying something like this and not having the self-awareness to realize it's actually a dig at yourself. hahahahaha Congratulations on being the most lame software developer on this planet who has only found himself in situations that can be solved by building strictly-CRUD software. Here's to hoping you keep pumping out those Wordpress plugins and ecommerce sites. I have 2 questions for you to ruminate on: 1. How many programming jobs have you had?
2. How many programming jobs exist in the entire world at this moment? It's gotta be what, a million job difference? lol. But you've seen it all right? hahahazha |
But even John Romero did the boring stuff along with the cool stuff. Andrej Karpathy wrote a ton of boilerplate Python to get his stuff up and running[0].
Or are you claiming that every single line of the nanochat[0] project is peak computer science algorithms no LLM can replicate today?
Take the initial commit tasks/ directory for example[1]. Dude is easily in the top 5 AI scientists in the world and he still spends a good time writing pretty basic string wrangling in Python.
My basic point here is that LLMs automate generating the boilerplate to a crazy degree, letting us spend more time in the bits that aren't boring and are actually challenging and interesting.
[0] https://github.com/karpathy/nanochat [1] https://github.com/karpathy/nanochat/tree/master/tasks