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Such statements are made by management folks who dont code, and somehow think coding can be hand-waved away.

Sure, this tool will improve the productivity of sw engineers, but so did the compiler which came 50 years back.


lol,

they gamed AIME by over-training the hell out of it for marketing purposes and called it done.

meanwhile, back-to-basics is broken.


unlike dot-com which brought in ecommerce, or smartphone which put info and entertainment in our pockets, genai is not doing anything to our daily lives.

productivity improvements in certain usecases are about it. it is not a giant leap which dot-com or smartphone enabled.


>genai is not doing anything to our daily lives.

I've used generative AI(specifically Claude 3 Opus and 3.5 Sonnet) for quite a lot of things in my daily life. Including using it to achieve the desired outcome where a legal process was being subverted and by writing a letter to the right department(drafted and edited with Claude's help); it helped a lot of other people out too in that instance. Not to mention my backlog of "programs/ideas I'd like to sketch out but don't have time for". Other than word processors, though, I've rarely had a computer program reconfigure itself to be helpful in wordsmithing with me, so maybe you should reevaluate your stance on genai with regards to how people are actually using it in their lives rather than paint over everyone's experience with your broad brush.


thats fair, "any generalization is almost always wrong"

but, gen-ai is not introducing a new mode to my day-to-day life. I would liken it to a calculator app. Sure, i use it sometimes, but, it is not changing my day in any significant way yet.

But ecommerce changed the way i shop, and the smartphone changed the way i transact, and consume info and entertainment


PullRequests become BullRequests


indeed, more speculative monies chasing returns.

such a large round implies hardware for yet another foundational model. perhaps with better steering etc..


> For example, Steve Jobs used to run an annual retreat for what he considered > the 100 most important people at Apple, and these were not the 100 people > highest on the org chart. Can you imagine the force of will it would take to do > this at the average company? And yet imagine how useful such a thing could be.

> It could make a big company feel like a startup

Nope, not true in my book. I would not like to be in any company that "selects" a small group of elites to a hawaii or las-vegas "retreat". then, said elites would propagate their new-found retreat wisdom from their cult-leader down to the plebs.


Then you would not be one of the most important people in that company anyway.

Just to be clear, there is nothing wrong with that, but commitment goes both way.


what caught my attention were the ads.

specifically, the hanes ad.. and i wonder why the hanes brand is still around whereas the motor heater brand is not.

and hotel rooms were $3 per night back then.


"A motorcar heater? That's a feature, not a product." - Steve Jobs's grandpa


$3 in 1929 = $55.18 in 2024

sure, thats on the lowend for a hotel these days, but i doubt that hotel knickerbocker was giving their best rooms for $3.


agree 100% with this take.

they are purpose building hardware for their specific application. debugging corner cases and making this robust is going to take them a decade. given that nobody else is interested in this non-standard solution, they dont have the benefit of the community debugging it, and improving on it in open-source.

appears to me to be a vanity effort as is the whole dojo project.


agree that anyone making broad generalities like "algos dont matter" is always mistaken. but API design is more about the system, and how it is carved out into components, and what each component does is the algo. so, api and algo are tied together.

compilers eased the production of assembly code. that didnt reduce the need for folks coding at a different layer of abstraction.


you misunderstand how software systems are built. These days, they are "assembled" out of building blocks which have clean interfaces.

similar to how houses are built from prefabricated components. Imagine that the AI is producing these pre-fab parts to order. But the design of the interfaces and assembly is still an art.

if you think of your job as a mason assembling bricks to build components, you are mistaken. you need to think of your job as an artist creating systems that work well built out of pre-fab components.

there is a story of how woz wrote the entire software for the early apple in assembly. nobody does that anymore. because, we have tools that produce assembly like compilers and such. that didnt take away the jobs of software engineers, because, someone had to now produce code at a different layer of abstraction.

imagine you ranting at the compiler 50 years back because it took away your job producing assembly code.


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