Not parent poster but: I probably spend at least 2/3 of my tokens on code review & QA. At least at my workplace, that's the culture.
because they're smarter than everyone else and
there is nothing of value to be learned from others
Yeah. It's absolutely unreal how often this is seen in our industry. It should have flatly refused.
I disagree in the strongest possible terms. A reasonable travel agent would have fired me as a customer.
Unless the LLM was actually acting as a travel agent -- booking the trip for you -- as opposed to merely advising you, this expectation feels off. unless you can somehow make it have judgment
It did have judgement. It told you what a bad idea it was. It takes the prompt and continues it based on weights in
the training data. If there is no data it picks the most
likely thing (maybe made up). If there is it’ll mostly
add things from that data. Maybe it’ll make tool calls and
pull in data that way too but you can’t actually trust all
the details.
I'd like you to point out which bits of this are different from talking to humans. If you replace "training data" with "memories", this is pretty much exactly how things might go if you asked a friend (or perhaps a flaky travel agent) for travel advice. I doubt most people could even tell the difference
between two tomatoes of the same type and ripeness
if one came from the grocery store and the other from
a backyard garden.
Yeah, and I would run as fast as Usain Bolt if we woke up with the same body one day. The people are not fine with bad strawberries but they don't know good strawberries
You most definitely get this phenomenon with tomatoes. There’s little demand for actually good tomatoes, because most people don’t even know what a good tomato tastes like at this point. My understanding is this is the advantage that’s pushing huge Mac Studio demand.
This is true, but also, people who made this investment found that they're still not very usable for those HUGE models. Don't take my word for it though. Lots of benchmarks out there. r/localllama is pretty active too. Since Apple already sells unified memory systems, what
is the market opportunity you envision?
nVidia and AMD can't make their consumer offerings too good at AI, because that risks interfering with their higher-margin data center sales. would you be dissatisfied by Opus-4.6-level open-weight
models, just because Opus 4.8 will be out?
Well, I see what you mean, but two big concepts...