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I've never lost respect for users on a platform faster than all the AI and GPT shills on here.

Holy shit, y'all are delulu.

Comments
  • 7
    Who is shilling for AI? I felt like most people here see utility in the tools it provides, but realize the limitations.
  • 5
    Well, I don‘t use it for coding but it‘s great for cases like this when I don‘t know what it means to call someone "shills". The translator is pretty useless for that.
  • 3
    If you mean with shills people, don't be so judgemental grandpa. We both know, before end of this year even you'll do tabtabtab. At least, if using codeium. You can't ignore it forever.
  • 1
    @retoor so are you have conflicting responses? The first response to this was much different than the current one. Jeckyll and Hyde sometimes.
  • 1
    can't blame them. humans want to be fundamentally lazy. it's a good strategy
  • 3
    @Demolishun I wanted to be nicer. The previous response was less nice and he didn't deserve that. I'm self correcting.

    I'm just tired because of the AI hate while I use it successfully every day and it's proven to be usefull as autocomplete. Also, for many things you can use it instead of Google. I thought we would be passed the AI hating right now and accept it's here, and it's here to stay.
  • 3
    @jestdotty if it's lazy depends on person doing it. I use the time I spared to do the next thing. It makes much more productive. Maybe even opposite of lazy.
  • 2
    @retoor lazy isn't bad. it's fundamentally efficient

    it's evolutionarily congruent. you want more meaningful results for less work

    people use lazy as a pejorative but it's a good thing. 20/80 rule

    it's used as a pejorative because we're all poisoned by our food... so body can't expend enough resources to finish jack shit it started cuz it's carrying too high a load already would be my guess

    but in nature lazy is good
  • 2
    @jestdotty Is it lazy to do pre-emptive work so you can AFK for the next X hours? e.g. you can see the next feature coming up so you prep the code for it when working on the current feature so it will take 10 minutes, but they budgeted 8 hours for the new one
  • 2
    @BordedDev ye

    works til they give you like x30 the work and don't pay you x30 the amount tho
  • 0
    @jestdotty Sure, got burned with that when I started, somehow I still manage to outperform most coders I've worked with just by planning the structure and envisioning how things should™️work. Also, that's why you don't push the “10 minutes of code” until the end of the day, or stretch it out until next week. You can even setup a cron for running the git push
  • 0
    @BordedDev sounds like Chinese water torture
  • 0
    @jestdotty Eh it's not really, people don't check how long I took other than check ticket status during standup. It's not in-depth planning, it's just the rough code layout, I do try to make my code very adaptable and have no fear of touching “unrelated” code to make it work better.

    Still, it's a “free” day off

    e.g. working on my mmo project, the networking stack is multiple libraries
  • 0
    @BordedDev pretending to be working instead of having something to do is Chinese water torture

    just stand here and pretend to sweep. I rather neck myself
  • 0
    @jestdotty Well I always have plenty to do, if I feel like working, I'll refactor/clean up since you'll never get a ticket for it (but can be added once you're done with it), or I just make it a lighter workday
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