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by scottlamb 1 day ago
Totally agree. They even vibe-wrote the paragraph I quoted.

I'd go so far as to say people who prompt AI to do something they can't do themselves are essentially non-technical management. I'm not a fan of non-technical managers of humans and similarly not a fan of this approach to AI either when quality really matters. (IMHO it's actually great for prototyping.)

The idea you can only learn to prompt well if you learned prompting before learning how to do the work yourself is strange, maybe even completely backwards. I've never heard teachers say to learn how to do math with a calculator then memorize multiplication facts later. Or anyone say the best managers are ones who first started in management and then developed technical expertise. Why are they so committed to the idea that this skill is so different than all the others?

It's probably a very convenient fantasy though for management types to think these expensive later-career people are useless or even harmful. And maybe said managers are non-technical themselves and don't understand the problems this creates.