← Back to context Comment by chii 15 hours ago But if the ai built solution is slightly less stupid, then it's still a win isnt it? 5 comments chii Reply legacynl 9 hours ago As far as I see it, AI is the reason they're unnecessarily paying 300k/year in the first place. A human engineer was the one that identified the problem with this JS dependency, and the human told then made AI fix its' original mistake.That's a win for human engineers, not AI. simultsop 13 hours ago but they saved $500k. Before some humans knew about constraints in it. Now nobody knows.Jokes aside, we will probably see everyone doing this, trying to remove human hands off of code, because they corrupt and AI does not.Joke jokes aside why did we even code until AI? pullshark91 5 hours ago I don't understand if you're joking or not. I hope you are... throwa356262 4 hours ago If you start with something really really horrible, chances are even an accidental change by an intern can improve it. skeeter2020 4 hours ago it can ALWAYS get worse...
legacynl 9 hours ago As far as I see it, AI is the reason they're unnecessarily paying 300k/year in the first place. A human engineer was the one that identified the problem with this JS dependency, and the human told then made AI fix its' original mistake.That's a win for human engineers, not AI.
simultsop 13 hours ago but they saved $500k. Before some humans knew about constraints in it. Now nobody knows.Jokes aside, we will probably see everyone doing this, trying to remove human hands off of code, because they corrupt and AI does not.Joke jokes aside why did we even code until AI? pullshark91 5 hours ago I don't understand if you're joking or not. I hope you are...
throwa356262 4 hours ago If you start with something really really horrible, chances are even an accidental change by an intern can improve it. skeeter2020 4 hours ago it can ALWAYS get worse...
As far as I see it, AI is the reason they're unnecessarily paying 300k/year in the first place. A human engineer was the one that identified the problem with this JS dependency, and the human told then made AI fix its' original mistake.
That's a win for human engineers, not AI.
but they saved $500k. Before some humans knew about constraints in it. Now nobody knows.
Jokes aside, we will probably see everyone doing this, trying to remove human hands off of code, because they corrupt and AI does not.
Joke jokes aside why did we even code until AI?
I don't understand if you're joking or not. I hope you are...
If you start with something really really horrible, chances are even an accidental change by an intern can improve it.
it can ALWAYS get worse...