I've heard this argument over and over and over. In the real world, AI has been shoved into search engines, word processors, email clients, even god damn PDF readers. I'm not the only one who is endlessly annoyed by its constant interjections and pop-ups asking me to use it that I can't permanently disable.
The article itself sounds like it was written by AI. If AI is so good that apps can be coded in hours with current paid tools, why aren't they popping up on all the app stores? My mind is open, show me one and I'll believe the wave is actually coming.
That intrusiveness reminds of me of that "Clippy" character that Microsoft Word had for a short time.
That's one of a long list of reasons that I don't use it, but I use WordPerfect instead. It's the most powerful word processing program out there. I write books that Word would gag on.
The simple answer- job security, for the people who write programs. The capability to program computers to write their own code has existed for decades. But, the older generation of programers were mostly smart enough to not build those Ai tools, mostly for their own job security.
Fast forward to today. That dam has broken. Computers have recently started writing their own programming. The time is rapidly approaching for Ai to flood that market, and many others. It's not hype, it's reality. Don't take it from me, but do heed the words of the worlds richest, and one of the worlds smartest men- Elon Musk.
Gemini provided me with code lines to copy into batch files to run in Task scheduler so I could automatically prevent my new "gaming" (I'm not a gamer...just like fast computer) laptop from regularly throttling the core speeds. It would hit 105C instantly at startup and regularly thereafter regardless of what I was doing on the computer. As an aside, I think its done (by Acer, in this case) so the computer will just barely make it through the warranty period. Anyway...this is a situation where I found AI to be very helpful, as I don't code. Now, the CPU never exceeds ~90C, even in Superposition benchmark, with very little difference in the score.
After this experience, I can see where "computers...writing there own programming" is a dam that is definitely broken.
The capability to program computers to write their own code has existed for decades
AI was basically useless for today's purposes until the Google Transformer paper was released in 2017.
Don't take it from me, but do heed the words of the worlds richest, and one of the worlds smartest men- Elon Musk.
Yeah, the guy who said we'd have full self driving 5 years ago. That guy has some great ideas. But he dreams of things that are 100x awesome and creates things that are 10x awesome. Reference to authority, especially one with a history of being wrong on big predictions, is a logical fallacy.
Here’s a tip on creating amazing books: Take a transcript of one of your recent broadcasts or podcasts and simply paste the transcript into the book prompt. That’s it! The entire book will be created from there.
Neat tool! I tried reading a few of the generated books, and it rephrases the incoming content into a book style. A bit repetitive for my taste but definitely an interesting app.
I've heard this argument over and over and over. In the real world, AI has been shoved into search engines, word processors, email clients, even god damn PDF readers. I'm not the only one who is endlessly annoyed by its constant interjections and pop-ups asking me to use it that I can't permanently disable.
The article itself sounds like it was written by AI. If AI is so good that apps can be coded in hours with current paid tools, why aren't they popping up on all the app stores? My mind is open, show me one and I'll believe the wave is actually coming.
That intrusiveness reminds of me of that "Clippy" character that Microsoft Word had for a short time.
That's one of a long list of reasons that I don't use it, but I use WordPerfect instead. It's the most powerful word processing program out there. I write books that Word would gag on.
I understand your skepticism, but I assure you, those apps are coming.
The simple answer- job security, for the people who write programs. The capability to program computers to write their own code has existed for decades. But, the older generation of programers were mostly smart enough to not build those Ai tools, mostly for their own job security.
Fast forward to today. That dam has broken. Computers have recently started writing their own programming. The time is rapidly approaching for Ai to flood that market, and many others. It's not hype, it's reality. Don't take it from me, but do heed the words of the worlds richest, and one of the worlds smartest men- Elon Musk.
Gemini provided me with code lines to copy into batch files to run in Task scheduler so I could automatically prevent my new "gaming" (I'm not a gamer...just like fast computer) laptop from regularly throttling the core speeds. It would hit 105C instantly at startup and regularly thereafter regardless of what I was doing on the computer. As an aside, I think its done (by Acer, in this case) so the computer will just barely make it through the warranty period. Anyway...this is a situation where I found AI to be very helpful, as I don't code. Now, the CPU never exceeds ~90C, even in Superposition benchmark, with very little difference in the score.
After this experience, I can see where "computers...writing there own programming" is a dam that is definitely broken.
AI was basically useless for today's purposes until the Google Transformer paper was released in 2017.
Yeah, the guy who said we'd have full self driving 5 years ago. That guy has some great ideas. But he dreams of things that are 100x awesome and creates things that are 10x awesome. Reference to authority, especially one with a history of being wrong on big predictions, is a logical fallacy.
Mike Adams vibe coded a book generator. I tried it and it works very well.
Neat tool! I tried reading a few of the generated books, and it rephrases the incoming content into a book style. A bit repetitive for my taste but definitely an interesting app.
I found it to be pretty cool. Want a textbook on something? Just write a prompt