Comment by fegd85

1 month ago

Even if I looked past the overwrought, self-indulgent Mad Max LARP (and the poor judgment evidenced by the prioritization of world-building minutia while the basic architecture is imploding), the cost of finding those kernels in a monstrosity of this size negates any ROI. 189k lines in four weeks will inevitably surface interesting pattern combinations — that's not merit, that's sample size. You might as well search the Library of Babel; at least the patterns are guaranteed to exist there.

The other problem with that reasoning is that whatever patterns ARE interesting are more likely to be new to AI-assisted coding generally – meaning a cleaner system built for the same use case will surface them without the archaeological dig, just by virtue of its builder having the skill to design it (and crucially, being more interested in designing it than in creating AI drawings of polecats in steampunk-adjacent garb).

I'm also a bit curious about at which point you start considering someone an idiot when they keep making objectively idiotic moves – the whimsical Disneyfied presentation, the "please don't download this" false modesty while keeping the repo public, the inexplicable code growth all come from the same place. They're not separate quirks: they're the same inability to edit, the same need for immediate audience validation, the same substitution of volume and narrative for actual engineering discipline. Someone who thinks "Polecats" and "Guzzoline" are good names for production abstractions is not suddenly going to develop the editorial rigor to scrap a codebase and rebuild.

Which is why it's worth remembering that Yegge's one successful shipped project was Grok, an internal tool used by Google engineers, so Yegge seems to have bought his own hype, missing how much of that project's success was likely subsidized by its user base comprising people skilled enough to route around its limitations.

These days he seems to be building for developers in general, but critically might be missing that actual developers immediately clock the project's ineptitude + Yegge's immature, narcissistic prioritization and peace the fuck out. The end result of this is filtering for the self-described vibe-coder types, people already Dunning-Krugered enough to believe you can prompt your way into a complete system without knowing how to reason about that system in order to guide the AI.

Which, fittingly, is how you end up with users who can't even follow "please don't download this yet".