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196 points yuedongze | 2 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
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gradus_ad ◴[] No.46195373[source]
The proliferation of nondeterministically generated code is here to stay. Part of our response must be more dynamic, more comprehensive and more realistic workload simulation and testing frameworks.
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yuedongze ◴[] No.46195431[source]
i've seen a lot of startups that use AI to QA human work. how about the idea of use humans to QA AI work? a lot of interesting things might follow
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Aldipower ◴[] No.46195474[source]
Sounds inhuman.
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1. quantummagic ◴[] No.46195561[source]
As an industry, we've been doing the same thing to people in almost every other sector of the workforce, since we began. Automation is just starting to come for us now, and a lot of us are really pissed off about it. All of a sudden, we're humanitarians.
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2. Terr_ ◴[] No.46196483[source]
> Automation is just starting to come for us now

This argument is common and facile: Software development has always been about "automating ourselves out of a job", whether in the broad sense of creating compilers and IDEs, or in the individual sense that you write some code and say: "Hey, I don't want to rewrite this again later, not even if I was being paid for my time, I'll make it into a reusable library."

> the same thing

The reverse: What pisses me off is how what's coming is not the same thing.

Customers are being sold a snake-oil product, and its adoption may well ruin things we've spent careers de-crappifying by making them consistent and repeatable and understandable. In the aftermath, some portion of my (continued) career will be diverted to cleaning up the lingering damage from it.