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Comment by evandrofisico

6 months ago

It is supremely annoying when i ask in a group if someone has experience with a tool or system and some idiot copies my question into some LLM and paste the answer. I can use the LLM just like anyone, if i'm asking for EXPERIENCE it is because I want the opinion of a human who actually had to deal with stuff like corner cases.

It's the 2025 version of lmgtfy.

  • Nah, that’s different. Lmgtfy has nothing to do with experience, other than experience in googling. Lmgtfy applies to stuff that can expediently be googled.

    • In my experience, usually what people had done was take your question on a forum, go to lmgtfy, paste the exact words in and then link back to it. As if to say "See how easy that was? Why are you asking us when you could have just done that?"

      Yes is true there could have been a skill issue. But it could also be true that the person just wanted input from people rather than Google. So that's why I drew the connection.

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If it's not worth writing, it's not worth reading.

  • I mean, there is a lot of hand written crap to, so even that isn't a good rule.

    • Both statements can be true at the same time, even though they seem to point in different directions. Here's how:

      1. *"If it's not worth writing, it's not worth reading"* is a normative or idealistic statement — it sets a standard or value judgment about the quality of writing and reading. It suggests that only writing with value, purpose, or quality should be produced or consumed.

      2. *"There is a lot of handwritten crap"* is a descriptive statement — it observes the reality that much of what is written (specifically by hand, in this case) is low in quality, poorly thought-out, or not meaningful.

      So, putting them together:

      * The first expresses *how things ought to be*. * The second expresses *how things actually are*.

      In other words, the existence of a lot of poor-quality handwritten material does not invalidate the ideal that writing should be worth doing if it's to be read. It just highlights a gap between ideal and reality — a common tension in creative or intellectual work.

      Would you like to explore how this tension plays out in publishing or education?

      1 reply →

    • > If it's not worth writing, it's not worth reading.

      It does NOT mean, AT ALL, that if it is worth writing, it is worth reading.

      Logic 101?

    • >I mean, there is a lot of hand written crap to

      You know how I know the difference between something an AI wrote and something a human wrote? The AI knows the difference between "to" and "too".

      I guess you proved your point.