• 3 Posts
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Joined 3 years ago
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Cake day: June 19th, 2023

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  • Don’t know what country you’re from but local versions of “how the f## are people voting for this person” are popping up and getting increasingly popular in most democracies.

    The US being the US clearly have the bigliest, crassest piece of garbage of us all, but looks like we are all heading there. And I’m looking at whatever the US are going to do to reverse this trend because I need to see a glimpse of hope that this trend IS reversible and that I won’t die in a nazi dictatorship after my grampa fought to rid us of the previous one.














  • I say this as someone who’s not particularly a fan of AI and tries to use it very sparingly.

    For me AI is not so much about productivity gains. Where I find it useful instead is to push me past the initial block of starting something from scratch. It’s that initial dopamine rush that the article mentions, from seeing an idea starting to take shape.

    In that sense, if I compare projects by time spent on them with or without AI after they are completed, I too would probably find there were no productivity gains. But some of these things I would never get started at all by myself.

    If you are a senior developer in a corporation, you know what you have to do, you are an expert in your domain, you rarely start something really new (and when you do, it is only after endless discussions and studies on tools, language, tech stack, architecture). AI is probably not a great help for you.

    But even in corporate life, there are a lot of things that are inportant but that you constantly set aside: from planning your career, to honing your communication skills or whatever it is that you could certainly learn to do (with time and dedication) but for some reason you keep postponing because you are not already an expert at them and it takes motivation to learn. That’s where AI found its niche in my life.