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heyalexhsu

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heyalexhsu
·vor 3 Monaten·discuss
Or maybe we're spending too much time on communicating. If too much time is allocated then its hard to stay focused and there's always the next time that can be used to clarify. Cut all the unnecessary meetings and only allocate the minimum viable time to communicate. Then everyone will be listening.
heyalexhsu
·vor 3 Monaten·discuss
That's why I added "across the country". I guess its a bad analogy.

I agree with the premise of the article but I just don't think going back to manual coding is the solution.

Here's my new attempt using puzzle as an analogy which I wrote yesterday:

Starting last year, I noticed coding was getting less fun. It’s like buying a puzzle set and finding out there’s an auto-complete button. Press it and the puzzle solves itself. Faster than me, better than me, prettier than me. It’s like playing a game with cheats on.

I don’t even have to touch the pieces anymore. I just tell the auto-solver what I want. Tell it I want a bird, it gives me a bird. A pirate ship? Here’s a pirate ship. At first I never imagined it could do a rocket, but with its help, that went from fantasy to reality fast.

Sometimes it doesn’t quite match what I wanted, but usually just telling it what’s wrong fixes things. The whole process is so fast that, if nothing’s broken, I don’t even bother looking at how it actually solved it. That would just waste time.

But coding felt less fun with this new assist mode.

The fun of puzzle-solving is gone. That feeling of trekking through the hard parts and finally reaching the summit is gone. Now it’s like taking a cable car up.

Before, I had to think alone for a long time, try things, experiment, until I finally cracked the problem. Now with the assist mode, it’s like doing college homework where the teacher already has the answer key. I just ask and I get a standard answer.

Coding went from craft to management. “I” went from a craftsman with standards to a foreman watching workers do the job. It’s just not the same. And “foreman” sounds kind of weak.
heyalexhsu
·vor 3 Monaten·discuss
Exactly. When you're operating as a business you need to be executing and AI helps a lot in brainstorming, developing, testing etc.

I have ADHD and just by brainstorming with AI helps me initiate.

Of course, you need to be the ultimate gatekeeper or else there will be quality issues. But isn't that the same when we write manual code? AI is just another tool in your toolkit.
heyalexhsu
·vor 3 Monaten·discuss
ya. compared to an iphone that normally gets 5-7 years.
heyalexhsu
·vor 3 Monaten·discuss
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heyalexhsu
·vor 3 Monaten·discuss
I can see the logic behind "manual coding" but it feels like driving across country vs taking the airplane. Once I've taken the airplane once, its so hard to go back...
heyalexhsu
·vor 3 Monaten·discuss
Interesting read. Nowadays, for most games, I do a few game loops and intentionally don't finish them. As a dad with two kids, I simply don't have that much time.

So I don't like games that have replay value or "endgame". I don't mind game loops but I want a game that finishes in 2-12 hours. 2 games that came to mind are Inscryption and Chants of Sennaar, both took around 12 hours and gave me a mindblowing experience.