About those automated longshoreman jobs.
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Code? I don’t think so. AI Can do that MUCH better than we can. Maybe some advanced code can still be done better by humans, but that will change soon enough…
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Code? I don’t think so. AI Can do that MUCH better than we can. Maybe some advanced code can still be done better by humans, but that will change soon enough…
@LuFins-Dad said in About those automated longshoreman jobs.:
Code? I don’t think so.
Yeah that was SO last decade, wasn't it?
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Coding?
I've seen the best advanced coding in my day, I doubt an AI robot can compete. It's called, natural human ability to introduce deliberate bugs. Why? Job security... deploy a good piece of code, include a few bugs, then the company will pay you dearly to find and fix the bugs. Sometimes it's a simple colon instead of a semi-colon, amirite @Horace ?
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Coding?
I've seen the best advanced coding in my day, I doubt an AI robot can compete. It's called, natural human ability to introduce deliberate bugs. Why? Job security... deploy a good piece of code, include a few bugs, then the company will pay you dearly to find and fix the bugs. Sometimes it's a simple colon instead of a semi-colon, amirite @Horace ?
@89th said in About those automated longshoreman jobs.:
Coding?
I've seen the best advanced coding in my day, I doubt an AI robot can compete. It's called, natural human ability to introduce deliberate bugs. Why? Job security... deploy a good piece of code, include a few bugs, then the company will pay you dearly to find and fix the bugs. Sometimes it's a simple colon instead of a semi-colon, amirite @Horace ?
Yes we’ve all dealt with such code. I am familiar with one code base that was notoriously incomprehensible and which had one comment. “Pay Satan”. I never read documentation and barely read comments anyway. If I want to understand some code, I read the code.
My own code is of course pristine and simple and direct. Self documenting.
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@Mik said in About those automated longshoreman jobs.:
I've seen machine generated code. Good luck debugging it or even understanding it.
Won't matter. Just get the AI to write more.
Capitalism trends toward "right now, for free." Good takes a back seat to those two.
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@Mik said in About those automated longshoreman jobs.:
I've seen machine generated code. Good luck debugging it or even understanding it.
Let’s revisit in 2 years…
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@Mik said in About those automated longshoreman jobs.:
I've seen machine generated code. Good luck debugging it or even understanding it.
Won't matter. Just get the AI to write more.
Capitalism trends toward "right now, for free." Good takes a back seat to those two.
@Aqua-Letifer said in About those automated longshoreman jobs.:
@Mik said in About those automated longshoreman jobs.:
I've seen machine generated code. Good luck debugging it or even understanding it.
Won't matter. Just get the AI to write more.
Capitalism trends toward "right now, for free." Good takes a back seat to those two.
It may be the most powerful tool of oppression ever.
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@Aqua-Letifer said in About those automated longshoreman jobs.:
@Mik said in About those automated longshoreman jobs.:
I've seen machine generated code. Good luck debugging it or even understanding it.
Won't matter. Just get the AI to write more.
Capitalism trends toward "right now, for free." Good takes a back seat to those two.
It may be the most powerful tool of oppression ever.
@Mik said in About those automated longshoreman jobs.:
@Aqua-Letifer said in About those automated longshoreman jobs.:
@Mik said in About those automated longshoreman jobs.:
I've seen machine generated code. Good luck debugging it or even understanding it.
Won't matter. Just get the AI to write more.
Capitalism trends toward "right now, for free." Good takes a back seat to those two.
It may be the most powerful tool of oppression ever.
AI or capitalism?
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@Mik said in About those automated longshoreman jobs.:
@Aqua-Letifer said in About those automated longshoreman jobs.:
@Mik said in About those automated longshoreman jobs.:
I've seen machine generated code. Good luck debugging it or even understanding it.
Won't matter. Just get the AI to write more.
Capitalism trends toward "right now, for free." Good takes a back seat to those two.
It may be the most powerful tool of oppression ever.
AI or capitalism?
@Aqua-Letifer said in About those automated longshoreman jobs.:
@Mik said in About those automated longshoreman jobs.:
@Aqua-Letifer said in About those automated longshoreman jobs.:
@Mik said in About those automated longshoreman jobs.:
I've seen machine generated code. Good luck debugging it or even understanding it.
Won't matter. Just get the AI to write more.
Capitalism trends toward "right now, for free." Good takes a back seat to those two.
It may be the most powerful tool of oppression ever.
AI or capitalism?
You know, I was thinking that as automation makes more and more improvements and AAI starts becoming more ubiquitous, some forms of Sofialism are going to be inevitable.
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At what point do we live in a world we do not understand the workings of and cannot affect it?
@Mik said in About those automated longshoreman jobs.:
At what point do we live in a world we do not understand the workings of and cannot affect it?
We already do. Look at our cars, our computers, our social media algorithms.
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Remember PostScript?
It's code that tells laser printers what to "draw" on a page, later Apple uses it to tell the computer what to "draw" on the screen.
In practice PostScript is virtually all computer generated. I looked at PostScript code and I don't even want to try to understand it.Lots of newer programming languages just "compile" to C or C++ then use gcc to further compile to machine code. I don't want to understand those intermediate C/C++ code either. :man-shrugging:
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Change is tough. I always struggle with change, but also realize that it is inevitable. I also think that humans are pretty adaptable. I am sure that there was a lot of "angst" when motor cars became popular, etc.
For example, automation in fast food maybe is actually a benefit for workers
Though food service workers and economists have long worried about the impact technology would have on the restaurant labor force, pilot programs in several fast-casual restaurants over the last few years have shown it may not have the negative impact they feared, a labor economist says.
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