astronaut_sloth

joined 2 years ago
 

Non-paywall version: https://archive.ph/i3G1r

[–] astronaut_sloth@mander.xyz 4 points 5 days ago

But there is something the courts can do that doesn't involve punishment: simply order the administration to re-hire the IGs with back pay and scrub the termination from the record. That's the actual legal remedy in this situation.

[–] astronaut_sloth@mander.xyz 16 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

Same. At this point, I'm only buying stuff that's local to my community from small businesses. I don't want to help American mega-corps, and I don't want to contribute to any tariffs going to fund the government.

[–] astronaut_sloth@mander.xyz 0 points 2 months ago (7 children)

I study AI, and have developed plenty of software. LLMs are great for using unfamiliar libraries (with the docs open to validate), getting outlines of projects, and bouncing ideas for strategies. They aren't detail oriented enough to write full applications or complicated scripts. In general, I like to think of an LLM as a junior developer to my senior developer. I will give it small, atomized tasks, and I'll give its output a once over to check it with an eye to the details of implementation. It's nice to get the boilerplate out of the way quickly.

Don't get me wrong, LLMs are a huge advancement and unbelievably awesome for what they are. I think that they are one of the most important AI breakthroughs in the past five to ten years. But the AI hype train is misusing them, not understanding their capabilities and limitations, and casting their own wishes and desires onto a pile of linear algebra. Too often a tool (which is one of many) is being conflated with the one and only solution--a silver bullet--and it's not.

This leads to my biggest fear for the AI field of Computer Science: reality won't live up to the hype. When this inevitably happens, companies, CEOs, and normal people will sour on the entire field (which is already happening to some extent among workers). Even good uses of LLMs and other AI/ML use cases will be stopped and real academic research drying up.