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It's demotivating to think that:

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  • Christine Lemmer-WebberC Christine Lemmer-Webber

    In a sense, the decision is somewhat made for us in that we're developing next-generation stuff that LLMs don't know how to auto-code at @spritely. We are working on core infrastructure that needs to be carefully thought about and written. LLMs introduce a lot of errors and aren't good at doing this kind of work on their own.

    And the goal was always that our work is there to be lifted from, to spread outward, the way people have long drawn from the well of the MIT / Stanford research labs in CS for decades, but for decentralized networking today

    But doing it now, in this way, in this environment, it's just really depressing and demotivating.

    Eskild HustvedtZ This user is from outside of this forum
    Eskild HustvedtZ This user is from outside of this forum
    Eskild Hustvedt
    wrote last edited by
    #12

    @cwebber Agreed. It’s making free and open source software development feel less rewarding. Less meaningful.

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    0
    • Christine Lemmer-WebberC Christine Lemmer-Webber

      It's demotivating to think that:

      - LLMs aren't good at producing original / novel work
      - You still need experts to advance that stuff
      - It will always be slower to move without using LLMs
      - Once an innovation is done though, an innovation can always be scooped up by the LLM users
      - "Bro why are you doing all this manually, I just vibe coded that in a weekend"

      Will it always be this way? It's depressing in the meanwhile, at least.

      mhoyeM This user is from outside of this forum
      mhoyeM This user is from outside of this forum
      mhoye
      wrote last edited by
      #13

      @cwebber For what it’s worth I think that we are eventually going to recognize “needing to throw massive computation at things” as a symptom of language and discoverability shortcomings that we’ll find better ways to address. We already package utility up in libraries and deterministic generators, but finding and learning what resources do what remains difficult.

      I think there’s still a better future out there where solving new problems is still a non-captured contribution to the common good.

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      0
      • Jorge CandeiasJ Jorge Candeias

        @cwebber @spritely We need you guys.

        The thing that scares me the most is that in 10 years time there'll be no new people able to code new stuff, to innovate.

        And *that* is the main reason why we absolutely need you guys. Regardless of how demotivating it may seem right now.

        Christine Lemmer-WebberC This user is from outside of this forum
        Christine Lemmer-WebberC This user is from outside of this forum
        Christine Lemmer-Webber
        wrote last edited by
        #14

        @jorgecandeias @spritely 💜

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        • SwiftS Swift

          @cwebber @spritely I had the near identical thought earlier - that someone needs to be doing the novel stuff, but we've created an environment that is, broadly speaking, uniquely demotivating to the sort of people that tend to do that sort of thing.

          allisonA This user is from outside of this forum
          allisonA This user is from outside of this forum
          allison
          wrote last edited by
          #15

          @swift @cwebber @spritely the two sides of llms being fundamentally conservative—they entrench the past while making a different future more difficult

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          • Christine Lemmer-WebberC Christine Lemmer-Webber

            In a sense, the decision is somewhat made for us in that we're developing next-generation stuff that LLMs don't know how to auto-code at @spritely. We are working on core infrastructure that needs to be carefully thought about and written. LLMs introduce a lot of errors and aren't good at doing this kind of work on their own.

            And the goal was always that our work is there to be lifted from, to spread outward, the way people have long drawn from the well of the MIT / Stanford research labs in CS for decades, but for decentralized networking today

            But doing it now, in this way, in this environment, it's just really depressing and demotivating.

            ǝʌɐpD This user is from outside of this forum
            ǝʌɐpD This user is from outside of this forum
            ǝʌɐp
            wrote last edited by
            #16

            @cwebber It's difficult to not think of Anathem. Communities of theorists living an ascetic life away from the rest of society.

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            0
            • Christine Lemmer-WebberC Christine Lemmer-Webber

              In a sense, the decision is somewhat made for us in that we're developing next-generation stuff that LLMs don't know how to auto-code at @spritely. We are working on core infrastructure that needs to be carefully thought about and written. LLMs introduce a lot of errors and aren't good at doing this kind of work on their own.

              And the goal was always that our work is there to be lifted from, to spread outward, the way people have long drawn from the well of the MIT / Stanford research labs in CS for decades, but for decentralized networking today

              But doing it now, in this way, in this environment, it's just really depressing and demotivating.

              mccM This user is from outside of this forum
              mccM This user is from outside of this forum
              mcc
              wrote last edited by
              #17

              @cwebber @spritely I mean the problem as I see it is: The people who primarily benefit from the work aren't paying for it, and there's no way to get them to contribute back ("licenses" no longer exist). So the art can only be extended by individual humans expending their savings or going into personal debt. (In theory basic research could additionally be funded by corporations, but since people who care about the art exist as a resource to be exploited, there is no reason for them to do so.)

              mccM 1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • Jorge CandeiasJ Jorge Candeias

                @cwebber @spritely We need you guys.

                The thing that scares me the most is that in 10 years time there'll be no new people able to code new stuff, to innovate.

                And *that* is the main reason why we absolutely need you guys. Regardless of how demotivating it may seem right now.

                gemelenG This user is from outside of this forum
                gemelenG This user is from outside of this forum
                gemelen
                wrote last edited by
                #18

                @jorgecandeias @cwebber @spritely

                It's not demotivation that comes first, but rather a simple survival of those who are out of money, out of funding for the choice of doing things that last and that bridges to the future.

                1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • mccM mcc

                  @cwebber @spritely I mean the problem as I see it is: The people who primarily benefit from the work aren't paying for it, and there's no way to get them to contribute back ("licenses" no longer exist). So the art can only be extended by individual humans expending their savings or going into personal debt. (In theory basic research could additionally be funded by corporations, but since people who care about the art exist as a resource to be exploited, there is no reason for them to do so.)

                  mccM This user is from outside of this forum
                  mccM This user is from outside of this forum
                  mcc
                  wrote last edited by
                  #19

                  @cwebber @spritely This is similar to the problem I have making video games: Some portion of my audience will pirate my work. Technically that doesn't harm me, *but* if *everyone* pirates the game then I don't get any money and I don't get to keep making games. I decide I don't care because not everyone pirates games and *some* of the people playing the game will pay for it. LLMs, for code, sets up the possibility the entire audience will be pirating the work. Which is wild since my code is MIT

                  mccM 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • Christine Lemmer-WebberC Christine Lemmer-Webber

                    In a sense, the decision is somewhat made for us in that we're developing next-generation stuff that LLMs don't know how to auto-code at @spritely. We are working on core infrastructure that needs to be carefully thought about and written. LLMs introduce a lot of errors and aren't good at doing this kind of work on their own.

                    And the goal was always that our work is there to be lifted from, to spread outward, the way people have long drawn from the well of the MIT / Stanford research labs in CS for decades, but for decentralized networking today

                    But doing it now, in this way, in this environment, it's just really depressing and demotivating.

                    Michał "rysiek" Woźniak · 🇺🇦R This user is from outside of this forum
                    Michał "rysiek" Woźniak · 🇺🇦R This user is from outside of this forum
                    Michał "rysiek" Woźniak · 🇺🇦
                    wrote last edited by
                    #20

                    @cwebber @spritely

                    techbros gonna techbro, sigh

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • Christine Lemmer-WebberC Christine Lemmer-Webber

                      It's demotivating to think that:

                      - LLMs aren't good at producing original / novel work
                      - You still need experts to advance that stuff
                      - It will always be slower to move without using LLMs
                      - Once an innovation is done though, an innovation can always be scooped up by the LLM users
                      - "Bro why are you doing all this manually, I just vibe coded that in a weekend"

                      Will it always be this way? It's depressing in the meanwhile, at least.

                      Gnuxie 💜🐝 G This user is from outside of this forum
                      Gnuxie 💜🐝 G This user is from outside of this forum
                      Gnuxie 💜🐝
                      wrote last edited by
                      #21
                      @cwebber yeah but programming was always about solving problems anyways. If we take what you say about LLMs here as like the reality of how they are used and worked or whatever. Then the thing to think here is that what is unravelled is that for the most part of the last 20 years these guys were just solving problems other people already solved over and over.
                      Gnuxie 💜🐝 G 1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • Gnuxie 💜🐝 G Gnuxie 💜🐝
                        @cwebber yeah but programming was always about solving problems anyways. If we take what you say about LLMs here as like the reality of how they are used and worked or whatever. Then the thing to think here is that what is unravelled is that for the most part of the last 20 years these guys were just solving problems other people already solved over and over.
                        Gnuxie 💜🐝 G This user is from outside of this forum
                        Gnuxie 💜🐝 G This user is from outside of this forum
                        Gnuxie 💜🐝
                        wrote last edited by
                        #22
                        @cwebber and if that is true then that isn't good either.
                        1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • mccM mcc

                          @cwebber @spritely This is similar to the problem I have making video games: Some portion of my audience will pirate my work. Technically that doesn't harm me, *but* if *everyone* pirates the game then I don't get any money and I don't get to keep making games. I decide I don't care because not everyone pirates games and *some* of the people playing the game will pay for it. LLMs, for code, sets up the possibility the entire audience will be pirating the work. Which is wild since my code is MIT

                          mccM This user is from outside of this forum
                          mccM This user is from outside of this forum
                          mcc
                          wrote last edited by
                          #23

                          @cwebber @spritely This said, I want to give you the flipside to the process you're describing: I am currently creating a small programming language which exists for no purpose except for me to make games for the Game Boy and NES. When I look at my language, I think: *An LLM user could not use this language, because there is not a sufficient corpus to generate code from¹*. And this sparks joy in me

                          ¹ And a significant portion of the corpus is testcases designed to fail

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • Christine Lemmer-WebberC Christine Lemmer-Webber

                            In a sense, the decision is somewhat made for us in that we're developing next-generation stuff that LLMs don't know how to auto-code at @spritely. We are working on core infrastructure that needs to be carefully thought about and written. LLMs introduce a lot of errors and aren't good at doing this kind of work on their own.

                            And the goal was always that our work is there to be lifted from, to spread outward, the way people have long drawn from the well of the MIT / Stanford research labs in CS for decades, but for decentralized networking today

                            But doing it now, in this way, in this environment, it's just really depressing and demotivating.

                            VissV This user is from outside of this forum
                            VissV This user is from outside of this forum
                            Viss
                            wrote last edited by
                            #24

                            @cwebber @spritely once the honeymoon period is over and the folks who keep getting rm'ed get louder and more often complain than the success stories gush, the scale will tip.

                            people have realised cloud was way riskier and more expensive and have started brining stuff in house again, the same will happen with llms.

                            itll just take a critical mass, like anything else.

                            and the llm horror stories are piling up

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • Christine Lemmer-WebberC Christine Lemmer-Webber

                              It's demotivating to think that:

                              - LLMs aren't good at producing original / novel work
                              - You still need experts to advance that stuff
                              - It will always be slower to move without using LLMs
                              - Once an innovation is done though, an innovation can always be scooped up by the LLM users
                              - "Bro why are you doing all this manually, I just vibe coded that in a weekend"

                              Will it always be this way? It's depressing in the meanwhile, at least.

                              AndrewA This user is from outside of this forum
                              AndrewA This user is from outside of this forum
                              Andrew
                              wrote last edited by
                              #25

                              @cwebber LLM users are the same people who walk through modern art galleries saying "my kid could do that"

                              1 Reply Last reply
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