|
|
|
|
|
by JKCalhoun
63 days ago
|
|
I think you're right that the use case for an LLM is still rather niche. It's perhaps still worth exploring though as they may well improve over time. Regardless, I have still found them useful. Diagnosing the problems with a car is maybe an esoteric example but is still useful. For many months now I have been working through learning about and implementing a hobbyist analog computer with LLM as engineer-confidant. I already knew the basics of op-amps and analog computing but was surprised at a lot of the new things I discovered only by way of the LLM saying (for example), "Hey, here's a nice way to get your reference voltages…" and the project benefited from it (and I learned about a new chip/device/technique). |
|
But it's only going to allow you to avail oneself of prior art/techniques.