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bartvk 26 minutes ago [-]
The blog mentions a Graphing Calculator. Not sure if it shares code, but macOS still ships with an app to draw graphs, Grapher.app
alecco 29 minutes ago [-]
A perfect example of a coding agent guided by a human with domain knowledge.
sourcecodeplz 23 minutes ago [-]
403 forbidden
nashashmi 15 minutes ago [-]
Works for me fine
varjag 1 hours ago [-]
It's bittersweet, isn't it. Software is solved, but at a terrible cost.
rschiavone 21 minutes ago [-]
How is it solved? LLMs cannot think new things, they can only cobble something together if it's in their training set.
varjag 7 minutes ago [-]
That "only" part used to be the hardest. Getting the ideas was never the hard part. I think someone here even wrote an essay on that.
tock 8 minutes ago [-]
New things are made by cobbling together existing things.
nashashmi 13 minutes ago [-]
I am not sure if claude had powerpc scripts in its training.
alecco 25 minutes ago [-]
Why is it bittersweet? Carpenters probably didn't cry when their tools improved.
It will be bittersweet when there's no human needed at the wheel but IMHO we are far, far from that. These models/agents are just mimicking human text and need guidance because they often get lost or stuck.
varjag 19 minutes ago [-]
Carpenters would have cried if all their work was reduced to shoving the logs into CNC machines.
Yes there is still human input but it requires comparatively no skill or depth and it gets easier by the month. If I were lobotimized today I'd still be able to function as half-assed architect to AIs anyway.
voidUpdate 6 minutes ago [-]
I think carpenters might cry if a company went around shoving every single piece of carpentry they could find into a machine, and then when you press a button on that machine, a chair comes out, and then they go around saying that this machine will replace carpenters forever, and they made this machine with no help from other carpenters, and furniture makers all went "who needs carpenters anymore, lets just use the chair machine"
It will be bittersweet when there's no human needed at the wheel but IMHO we are far, far from that. These models/agents are just mimicking human text and need guidance because they often get lost or stuck.
Yes there is still human input but it requires comparatively no skill or depth and it gets easier by the month. If I were lobotimized today I'd still be able to function as half-assed architect to AIs anyway.