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programming

  • UpTrust Admin avatar

    Incorruptible Organizations AMA with Eric Ries. Wednesday 2/4 at 3:00 PM CT

    Lean Startup author who now focuses on legal structures to protect mission-driven organizations from corruption. incorruptible.co

    Free book giveaway! Register here.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QNfb54LuzwI
    Godless Guru•...

    Perhaps defining ‘exceptions’ would give me something to address.  Not aware of any at functionally levels. 

    programming
    software development
    Comments
    0
  • UpTrust Admin avatar

    AMA with Jeffrey Ladish. Wednesday 2/4 at 2:00 PM CT

    Executive director of Palisade Research; studying AI loss of control risks.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ALfhq3r7Cz0
    jordanSA•...

    i do love it!
    yeah there's lot of this in programming, mostly under the name "red-teaming"

    programming
    cybersecurity
    Comments
    0
  • UpTrust Admin avatar

    AMA with Jeffrey Ladish. Wednesday 2/4 at 2:00 PM CT

    Executive director of Palisade Research; studying AI loss of control risks.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ALfhq3r7Cz0
    JulieI•...

    What is rewarded... in what way.? Is it money for the company/programmers or is there a programmatic satisfaction in recording numbers of market share and profit margin?

    economics
    programming
    business
    Comments
    0
  • TRG•...

    What about tech is exciting you right now?

    If the goal is to make tech exciting again, I'd love to hear what is motivating people in tech right now? For myself, I stopped doing any real coding decades a go.  It stopped being a core skill and I didn't have time to learn any modern languages just for fun....
    artificial intelligence
    programming
    technology
    Comments
    0
  • Aphox14 avatar

    Hey Gang. Hey there! I am a children's book author, part time travel agent and sports nut. Hope everybody's hanging in there. 

    https://www.aaronfoxwrites.com
    TRG•...
    I've been down a couple of AI dead ends.  But, as I get better and better.  I find that AI allows me to create in l ways I could not have before.  Art is a great example.  I can have an idea that I want to create, but I don't have the skills to implement the idea well....
    artificial intelligence
    programming
    art and design
    technology and creativity
    Comments
    0
  • Robbie Carlton avatar

    Please help me stay intellectually honest! I'm not a fan of generative AI in general, and LLM technology specifically. I think its capabilities are being drastically over-hyped. It's a perfect, sweaty example of a solution looking for a problem. I'm skeptical of many claims people are making wrt how it's helping them.

    My experience is it's like having access to an idiot-savant intern. Awful at most tasks, but knows everything and can read incredibly quickly.

    Publicly, I've taken on the mantle of a staunch critic of generative AI and a pro-human, pro-soul advocate.

    And for the most part, I'm happy with that stance. I like it. It feels good to rail against something, and it feels good to contrast a thing that I hate against something I love. It throws the love into more relief.

    Yet, I don't want to lose any babies in that bathwater, and I don't want to lose my intellectual honesty in the neurochemical rush of fighting for a cause. So I'd love to explore the best use cases of LLMs that you all are actually using, and actually finding beneficial, life improving, productivity increasing, all of that.

    I'd love to hear your experience, and ideally, you'd to tell me how you're doing what you're doing with it in enough detail so that I can try it.

    I'll start.

    Absolutely most useful thing I've found for it so far, and it's not even close, is language learning.

    I'm in a slow process of learning Japanese, and asking a chatbot to break down the grammar of a specific sentence is super useful. It's also great for generating content for flashcards. Say you have a set of characters, and you want some example words that use each particular character. It's so easy to generate stuff like that.

    Outside of that, I use it in super basic ways (basically as google with one less step).

    So please, give me your best use cases, things that you've not only been impressed by, in a "oh wow, that monkey can tap dance!" way, but that has actually improved the quality of your life.

    joshuaSA•...
    I've done very little vibe coding. I played with it for coding some a year or so ago, and the rate of inaccuracy meant that it just never felt worth my time. Like, I don't mind typing....
    technology and society
    artificial intelligence
    human-computer interaction
    programming
    software development
    Comments
    0
  • Robbie Carlton avatar

    Please help me stay intellectually honest! I'm not a fan of generative AI in general, and LLM technology specifically. I think its capabilities are being drastically over-hyped. It's a perfect, sweaty example of a solution looking for a problem. I'm skeptical of many claims people are making wrt how it's helping them.

    My experience is it's like having access to an idiot-savant intern. Awful at most tasks, but knows everything and can read incredibly quickly.

    Publicly, I've taken on the mantle of a staunch critic of generative AI and a pro-human, pro-soul advocate.

    And for the most part, I'm happy with that stance. I like it. It feels good to rail against something, and it feels good to contrast a thing that I hate against something I love. It throws the love into more relief.

    Yet, I don't want to lose any babies in that bathwater, and I don't want to lose my intellectual honesty in the neurochemical rush of fighting for a cause. So I'd love to explore the best use cases of LLMs that you all are actually using, and actually finding beneficial, life improving, productivity increasing, all of that.

    I'd love to hear your experience, and ideally, you'd to tell me how you're doing what you're doing with it in enough detail so that I can try it.

    I'll start.

    Absolutely most useful thing I've found for it so far, and it's not even close, is language learning.

    I'm in a slow process of learning Japanese, and asking a chatbot to break down the grammar of a specific sentence is super useful. It's also great for generating content for flashcards. Say you have a set of characters, and you want some example words that use each particular character. It's so easy to generate stuff like that.

    Outside of that, I use it in super basic ways (basically as google with one less step).

    So please, give me your best use cases, things that you've not only been impressed by, in a "oh wow, that monkey can tap dance!" way, but that has actually improved the quality of your life.

    Robbie Carlton•...
    Thanks Joshua. This has a lot of overlap with my experience AI can cite it's sources these days and I've found going to the primary sources to validate what the AI said is key....
    artificial intelligence
    human-computer interaction
    programming
    information literacy
    Comments
    0
  • Robbie Carlton avatar

    Please help me stay intellectually honest! I'm not a fan of generative AI in general, and LLM technology specifically. I think its capabilities are being drastically over-hyped. It's a perfect, sweaty example of a solution looking for a problem. I'm skeptical of many claims people are making wrt how it's helping them.

    My experience is it's like having access to an idiot-savant intern. Awful at most tasks, but knows everything and can read incredibly quickly.

    Publicly, I've taken on the mantle of a staunch critic of generative AI and a pro-human, pro-soul advocate.

    And for the most part, I'm happy with that stance. I like it. It feels good to rail against something, and it feels good to contrast a thing that I hate against something I love. It throws the love into more relief.

    Yet, I don't want to lose any babies in that bathwater, and I don't want to lose my intellectual honesty in the neurochemical rush of fighting for a cause. So I'd love to explore the best use cases of LLMs that you all are actually using, and actually finding beneficial, life improving, productivity increasing, all of that.

    I'd love to hear your experience, and ideally, you'd to tell me how you're doing what you're doing with it in enough detail so that I can try it.

    I'll start.

    Absolutely most useful thing I've found for it so far, and it's not even close, is language learning.

    I'm in a slow process of learning Japanese, and asking a chatbot to break down the grammar of a specific sentence is super useful. It's also great for generating content for flashcards. Say you have a set of characters, and you want some example words that use each particular character. It's so easy to generate stuff like that.

    Outside of that, I use it in super basic ways (basically as google with one less step).

    So please, give me your best use cases, things that you've not only been impressed by, in a "oh wow, that monkey can tap dance!" way, but that has actually improved the quality of your life.

    joshuaSA•...
    The best ways I've found to use AI are explaining concepts to me that I can easily grok but just am not familiar with, to do simple tasks that I can audit, and as a search engine....
    education
    artificial intelligence
    programming
    technology
    Comments
    0
  • jordan avatar

    Quick reflections on vibe-coding:

    • kicks up weird addiction cycles in me
    • the end product feels more like 20-30% jordan's creation and 70-80% LLM's. The text for example is all a little off, the style, etc, and it drifts because it's so easy to have it do it and so much more "time consuming" to go fix all the little bits (plus you have no guarantee it wont fuck something else up) and keep them coherent, versus just surrendering to the llm
    • As a result I feel weirdly not that autonomous... like is the LLM working for me or am I working for it? This feels similar to the addiction cycle too
    • There's a vibe that's similar to the "HR Lady" tone and em-dash hell of the LLM writing; like everything is sanitized and optimized for general professional sleeze marketing and you can't quite put your finger on why it sucks. The glassmorphism designs and gradients feel similar
    • I continue to feel like I'm learning a lot from it, but I have updated to think that at the current stage its at, its actually an unhealthy practice and so is a little like a blood sacrifice that should be used sparingly. I imagine this will change, but maybe it'll get worse.
    blakeSA•...
    There are two ways I know of to code with LLMs well, at least if you’re me. 1: If you want to keep building on something: know what it’s doing all the time, and take responsibility for whether that’s a good way to do it....
    artificial intelligence
    programming
    machine learning
    Comments
    0
  • dara_like_sara avatar

    Checking where this post goes. Just checking if this ends up in a group

    jordanSA•...

    yeah now it clearly shows its in uptrust_relevant

    programming
    data analysis
    Comments
    0
  • jordan avatar

    From the perspective of projection, what's Trump symbolize in you? Is it something in you that you haven’t loved yet?
    Is it something in you that you haven’t boundaried appropriately?
    What else?

    Sometimes to do this kind of thought experiment i interpret my waking life as if it were a dream. When I look at how I view trump, what does he symbolize? And then I can ask how i relate to that to find out how I’m relating to that thing.

    I will come back and do this self analysis in a moment.

    marcello•...

    Wow, I use some angle brackets and suddenly it adds backticks and bolds the section. I must have angered the markdown gods, lol.

    computer science
    humor in technology
    markdown formatting
    programming
    web development
    Comments
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