7:29 AM
@KevinM.Mansour No, not at all, because AI works nothing like the human brain. I don't mean "it's slightly different" or "it's not as good". I mean that it's fundamentally, methodologically completely different.
@KevinM.Mansour The thing is, the only people who think that ChatGPT's ability to write code is "good" are the people who can't write code themselves. Then, yes, it's much better than their ability; shockingly so. But it's not "good". It's terrible.
@OlegValteriswithUkraine I guess we can infer that you're better at writing software than a language-learning model that knows nothing at all about software. Well... congratulations, I guess?
@OlegValteriswithUkraine If it's good at generating scaffolding that mostly works, that's a clear sign that there's way too much scaffolding in your language/framework of choice. :-)
To be fair, that's almost always the case, so I'm not picking on any specific framework/language/environment with that statement. But still, the point remains... And I don't see why a chatbot is any better for this than the "wizards" and templates of old.
@OlegValteriswithUkraine Eh.... they don't? :-)
@OlegValteriswithUkraine Because you are superwise. :-)
@OlegValteriswithUkraine Jeff wanted to make money from it. It was his career. It was how he fed his family. He arguably could have open-sourced the code in a similar way to how companies like Microsoft are now open-sourcing proprietary code, but I don't see how going full non-profit would have worked.
@OlegValteriswithUkraine Hahaha, so not like my Cherry MX Green switches?
*skips over a bunch of JS stuff* :-)