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LLM Inevitabilism

(tomrenner.com)
1616 points SwoopsFromAbove | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
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mg ◴[] No.44568158[source]
In the 90s a friend told me about the internet. And that he knows someone who is in a university and has access to it and can show us. An hour later, we were sitting in front of a computer in that university and watched his friend surfing the web. Clicking on links, receiving pages of text. Faster than one could read. In a nice layout. Even with images. And links to other pages. We were shocked. No printing, no shipping, no waiting. This was the future. It was inevitable.

Yesterday I wanted to rewrite a program to use a large library that would have required me to dive deep down into the documentation or read its code to tackle my use case. As a first try, I just copy+pasted the whole library and my whole program into GPT 4.1 and told it to rewrite it using the library. It succeeded at the first attempt. The rewrite itself was small enough that I could read all code changes in 15 minutes and make a few stylistic changes. Done. Hours of time saved. This is the future. It is inevitable.

PS: Most replies seem to compare my experience to experiences that the responders have with agentic coding, where the developer is iteratively changing the code by chatting with an LLM. I am not doing that. I use a "One prompt one file. No code edits." approach, which I describe here:

https://www.gibney.org/prompt_coding

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1. uludag ◴[] No.44570120[source]
While I accept this point completely, in a way it's not really different from someone saying that programming with IDEs is the future because look how much time it saved.

The inevitabilism isn't that we'll have some sleek dev tools that speed programmers hours a day (which high level languages, IDEs, etc. in fact do). It's about a change in the operation of our socio economic systems: who are the brokers of knowledge, how knowledge work is defined, a new relationship between employer and employee, new modes of surveillance, etc.

The peddlers of inevitabilism are not doing it to convince stubborn developers a newer, better way of writing software. They are trying to convince us to play on a new game board, one which better suits their hand and they'd be set up to win big. More likely than not you'd be at a disadvantage on this new board. Want to argue against it? Don't like the new rules? Well too bad, because this is inevitable, just the way things are (or so the argument goes).