Comment by irdc
4 hours ago
But LLMs don’t seem particularly good at inventing new ways to code (or write, or…). It’s literally all derivative. So what happens in 10 years? Are we headed for a great stagnation?
4 hours ago
But LLMs don’t seem particularly good at inventing new ways to code (or write, or…). It’s literally all derivative. So what happens in 10 years? Are we headed for a great stagnation?
> But LLMs don’t seem particularly good at inventing new ways to code (or write, or…). It’s literally all derivative.
I think the key part is how much thought goes into something.
Optimistically, LLMs are good at taking unstructured input, and (probably) producing the intended output from that. -- This allows for an interesting new way of coding: a set of instructions don't need to be as rigorous as a shell script, but can be natural language.
That part surely extends creativity. An LLM will be familiar with domain ideas I'm not, even if an LLM is completely disinterested in doing things.
Pessimistically, I think it's still not clear what the right way of interacting online with all of this is (other than clear expectations of "no AI")... in some sense LLM output is worthless to share, in the sense that I'm just as capable of asking the LLM to output something as anyone else is.
It’s like arguing that nobody is going to invent new ways to ride horses in the age to automobile.
If the way humanity advances were via new ways to ride horses, then yes.
You made me curious. Has anyone invented new ways to ride horses in the age of the automobile?
Best I could find: https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.1174605
There was a relatively big shift in riding style right around the same time of the first mass production of vehicles.