Monarch Wadia

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Monarch Wadia

Monarch Wadia

@monarchwadia

LLMs are cool

🇨🇦 Katılım Temmuz 2016
301 Takip Edilen2.8K Takipçiler
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Monarch Wadia
Monarch Wadia@monarchwadia·
Ode to @GrugBrainedDev grug sit by fire, code in hand, wonder why things not go as planned. complexity demon lurk in code, make grug heavy, big brain load. test shaman chant, "test all night!" grug just want code work right. shiny rocks spend on agile talk, grug prefer just take a walk. microservice far too much, grug prefer monolith touch. grug write log, many line, hope debug in less time. grug love tool, debugger dear, help make bug disappear. grug code simple, clear and bright, fight complexity demon with all might. grug say to young grug crew, "keep it simple, this much true. too much thinking, brain will crack, write good code, no looking back."
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Cheng Lou
Cheng Lou@_chenglou·
My dear front-end developers (and anyone who’s interested in the future of interfaces): I have crawled through depths of hell to bring you, for the foreseeable years, one of the more important foundational pieces of UI engineering (if not in implementation then certainly at least in concept): Fast, accurate and comprehensive userland text measurement algorithm in pure TypeScript, usable for laying out entire web pages without CSS, bypassing DOM measurements and reflow
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Monarch Wadia
Monarch Wadia@monarchwadia·
@ajcwebdev shlabbidy dabbity get this shlabbidy dabbity out of shlabbidy dabbity my head 😆
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Anthony Campolo (ajcwebdev)
I'm about to shlabbadee dabbity doo shlabbadde dabbity da shlabbadde dabbity dee shlabbadde dabbity do
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Monarch Wadia
Monarch Wadia@monarchwadia·
Excel is a cognitive crutch, I should use a calculator. No, wait, a calculator is a cognitive crutch, I should use an abacus. No, wait, an abacus is a cognitive crutch, I should use pen and paper. No, wait...
Sukh Sroay@sukh_saroy

🚨BREAKING: If you've used ChatGPT for writing or brainstorming in the last 6 months, your creative ability may already be permanently damaged. A controlled experiment just proved the effect doesn't reverse when you stop using it. 3,302 creative ideas. 61 people. 30 days of tracking. Researchers split students into two groups. Half used ChatGPT for creative tasks. Half worked alone. For five days, the ChatGPT group outperformed on every metric. Higher scores. More ideas. Better output. AI was making them better. Then day 7. ChatGPT removed. Every creativity gain vanished overnight. Crashed to baseline. Zero lasting improvement. But that's not the bad part. ChatGPT users' ideas became increasingly identical to each other over time. Same content. Same structure. Same phrasing. The researchers called it homogenization. Everyone using ChatGPT started producing the same ideas wearing different clothes. When ChatGPT was removed, the creativity boost disappeared -- but the homogenization stayed. 30 days later, same result. Their creative range had been permanently compressed. Five days of use. Permanent damage 30 days later. A separate trial confirmed it. 120 students. 45-day surprise test. ChatGPT users scored 57.5%. Traditional learners scored 68.5%. AI reduces cognitive effort. Less effort means weaker encoding. Weaker encoding means less creative raw material. You're not renting a productivity boost. You're financing it with your originality. The interest rate is permanent.

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kalomaze
kalomaze@kalomaze·
the fucking odds of this screenshot occurring
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andrew chen
andrew chen@andrewchen·
The Turing test for AI video should be fixing the last season of Game of Thrones If we can do that, we can do anything
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Elon Musk
Elon Musk@elonmusk·
@robustus Code itself will go away in favor of just making the binary directly. The next step after that is direct, real-time pixel generation by the neural net.
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Dan
Dan@robustus·
Turns out with claude code, my decades long strategy of NOT deeply learning: - regexs - sql - nginx confs - elaborate shell commands - advanced shell scripting - any javascript framework - perf optimization - webpack, cdns, bundlers - 1000 other things ...was entirely correct.
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Ryan Dahl
Ryan Dahl@rough__sea·
This has been said a thousand times before, but allow me to add my own voice: the era of humans writing code is over. Disturbing for those of us who identify as SWEs, but no less true. That's not to say SWEs don't have work to do, but writing syntax directly is not it.
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Ian Hinga
Ian Hinga@ian_hinga·
@thiagotm @rough__sea By the end of this year AI will be writing high quality code that won’t need reviewing
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Monarch Wadia
Monarch Wadia@monarchwadia·
This is wild. I created a @trpcio-style router pattern, but for @electronjs IPC calls between the webview and Node.js. It took less than an hour using @claudeai . The type system is fully inferred from the Node.js code, just like in the original TRPC project. WTF.
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Markov
Markov@MarkovMagnifico·
how my codebase written entirely with claude code runs
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doomer
doomer@uncledoomer·
kind of crazy how being given one of these books as a boy growing up basically guarantees youll turn out smart and technically proficient in a variety of fields
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Monarch Wadia
Monarch Wadia@monarchwadia·
@dosco Agreed. I don't even think it'll be seen as massively accelerated in the long run.
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𝖦𝗋𝗂𝗆𝖾𝗌 ⏳
A new type of illiteracy: The afflicted are people who believe they can read well because they once did. They write well, and their brains r making fast connections and "saving time" so they skim really fast, lock on to key words, make connections about what they assume is being said due to pre existing assumptions about the author. then emotional and eloquently react to an argument you did not make. This type of illiteracy feels very insidious and scary because it's effecting academics and engineers and people society relies on
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Monarch Wadia
Monarch Wadia@monarchwadia·
@dosco yeah, asking AI questions is often a lot better than asking a teacher questions.
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spacy
spacy@dosco·
@monarchwadia fair point, a one on one teacher who knows his stuff and can explain well would come out on top but thats pretty rare and is ai better than a going to a class room
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spacy
spacy@dosco·
ai is a better more patient and smarter teacher than most so there is obviously another reason to spend all this valuable time in school
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Memory Palace Roots
Memory Palace Roots@GreenBeans80277·
@nickcammarata We need more comic book explanations of clinging, but by someone who is more familiar with the phenomenology
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Nick
Nick@nickcammarata·
every clinging is a forgetting of what you are, every clench blocks out the endlessly fulfilling sun of being
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Monarch Wadia
Monarch Wadia@monarchwadia·
the 'boredom' experienced while waiting for the LLM to finish is often accompanied by anxiety, caused by not knowing exactly what the LLM-generated code does.
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Nick
Nick@nickcammarata·
my friend @adamludwin built a beautiful meditation timer for ios as a side project, totally free. the only downside is it lacks insight timer’s 47 needless popups, which were annoying, triggering, and therefore great for practice apps.apple.com/us/app/am-fm/i…
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Monarch Wadia
Monarch Wadia@monarchwadia·
Coding without LLMs just feels primitive now. Exactly the same feeling I got when I started using Intellisense more aggressively. Can't go back now.
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Monarch Wadia
Monarch Wadia@monarchwadia·
@nickcammarata Are you working on more cross-domain things now, with the LLMs? Or are you still mostly within the same domain as you were pre-LLMs, but faster?
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Nick
Nick@nickcammarata·
my brain is only reserved for hard problems now, and mostly tries to avoid them too. anything that requires more than 4 seconds of thinking and less than 2 hours is now immediately handed off to the ais
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