For the 3 on the right side, it matters quite a bit whether you slice in direction from root to stem or cross, root to stem is much better.
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In order to replace all work you would need generic purpose robots, hence my line about what you are implying.
Even with all the automation we have now, people still work.
Why does it say cryptocurrency instead of pyramid scheme for the second caption?
They don’t, not in the way you are implying
You are ofc aware that even if we successfully get rid of capitalism, we can’t get rid of having to work, right?
kameecoding@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•AI agents wrong ~70% of time: Carnegie Mellon studyEnglish11·4 days agoYou just can’t talk to people, period, you are just a dick, you were also just proven to be stupider than a fucking LLM, have a nice day 😀
kameecoding@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•AI agents wrong ~70% of time: Carnegie Mellon studyEnglish1·5 days agoYou see, I wanted to be petty and do another dismissive reply, but instead I fed our convo to copilot and asked it to explain, here you go, as you can see I have previously used it for coding tasks, so I didn’t feed it any extra info, so there you go, even copilot can understand the huge “leap” I made in logic. goddamn the sweet taste of irony.
Copilot reply:
Certainly! Here’s an explanation Person B could consider:
The implied logic in Person A’s argument is that if you distrust code written by Copilot (or any AI tool) simply because it wasn’t written by you, then by the same reasoning, you should also distrust code written by junior developers, since that code also isn’t written by you and may have mistakes or lack experience.
However, in real-world software development, teams regularly review, test, and maintain code written by others—including juniors, seniors, and even AI tools. The quality of code depends on review processes, testing, and collaboration, not just on who wrote it. Dismissing Copilot-generated code outright is similar to dismissing the contributions of junior developers, which isn’t practical or productive in a collaborative environment.
kameecoding@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•Danish Ministry switching from Microsoft Office/365 to LibreOfficeEnglish27·5 days agoWouldn’t it be easier to strike a support deal with the libre office developers and just give them the money to do it?
I think it was a US uni campus, that redid the lawn and didn’t put down any walking paths and waited for the desire paths to form and then paved those
But what why would they be riding their loud motorcycles in a coffee shop?
TIL what the fuck this is called in English.
Here is a more fun one that I learned is rather rare, but can scare the shit out of you: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Precordial_catch_syndrome
What the fuck is the f slur? Other than fuck
kameecoding@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•AI agents wrong ~70% of time: Carnegie Mellon studyEnglish32·5 days agoDo you use an IDE for writing your code or do you use a notepad like a “real” programmer? An IDE like Intellij has fancy shit like generating getters, setters, constructors, equals hashscode, you should never use those, real programmers write those by hand.
Your attention detail is very good btw, which I am ofc being sarcastic about because if you had any you’d have noticed I have never said I write my code with chat gpt, I said Unit tests, sql for unit tests.
Ofc attention to detail is not a requirement of software engineering so you should be good. (This was also sarcasm I feel like you need this to be pointed out for you).
Also by your implied logic that the code being not written by you = bad, no company should ever hire Junior engineers, I mean what are you gonna do? Fucking read the code they wrote?
kameecoding@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•AI agents wrong ~70% of time: Carnegie Mellon studyEnglish43·5 days agoLmao, okay buddy, based on how many interviews I have sat on in, the chances that you are a worse programmer than me are much higher than you being better than me.
Being a pompous ass dismissive of new tooling makes you chances even worse 😕
kameecoding@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•AI agents wrong ~70% of time: Carnegie Mellon studyEnglish109·5 days agoFor me as a software developer the accuracy is more in the 95%+ range.
On one hand the built in copilot chat widget in Intellij basically replaces a lot my google queries.
On the other hand it is rather fucking good at executing some rewrites that is a fucking chore to do manually, but can easily be done by copilot.
Imagine you have a script that initializes your DB with some test data. You have an Insert into statement with lots of columns and rows so
Inser into (column1,…,column n) Values row1, Row 2 Row n
Addig a new column with test data for each row is a PITA, but copilot handles it without issue.
Similarly when writing unit tests you do a lot of edge case testing which is a bunch of almost same looking tests with maybe one variable changing, at most you write one of those tests, then copilot will auto generate the rest after you name the next unit test, pretty good at guessing what you want to do in that test, at least with my naming scheme.
So yeah, it’s way overrated for many-many things, but for programming it’s a pretty awesome productivity tool.
I mean, technically it is
0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9
Why not just a bag of spag?
Because the road design at fault, not people.
Make roads narrower, and people will drive slower
Jira is the worst project manager software, except for all the others - Churchill