> This is still true - a compiler can never win this battle. All a human programmer has to do is take the output of the compiler and make a single optimisation, and he/she wins. This is the advantage that the human has - they can use any of a wide variety of tools at their disposal (including the compiler), whilst the compiler can only do what it was programmed. The best the compiler can hope for is a tie.
I really love this project and want to keep rooting for its success. But the presentation is currently very confusing. The biggest issue is that I can’t tell what is fictional 'lore' and what is an actual feature of it. I don’t think you have to sacrifice the concept to make things clearer; it’s definitely possible to maintain a strong concept while ensuring visitors aren't lost. Anyway, I hope this goes well!
How about adding these texts and reactions to LLM's context and iterating to improve performance? Keep doing it until a real person says, 'Yes, you're good enough now, please stop...' That should work.
They say no childbirth means no children. But must children be such an inconvenience? Even if Korea ceases to produce human infants, AI children may be born in their stead. Or, through reverse-aging, the elderly could become the new children.
The links you provided need a control group to be considered proof. The key is how it compares to when counseling was provided by just a friend, not an expert.
It's completely different to say that the government took the lead in an industry that didn't exist before and to say that it provided support to an already successful industry. Of course, what I said was wrong refers to the former. In fact, the government supports all industries to some extent, so that can't be a label.
I am Korean, and what you are saying is a lie created by anti-Korean people in Japan. Do you really think it makes sense for a government experiencing an economic crisis to desperately seek revenue sources and hope to overcome the crisis by funding a cultural industry that hasn't even succeeded yet?
> It would be an interesting test to hand the unfixed revision of the code to an LLM while also giving it the docs, and say “make any fixes to make this conform to standards of the framework and libraries”.
For your info, a few days ago, I was trying to migrate Tailwind 3 to 4 in a codebase where I had just set up the boilerplate, and I went through hell and eventually gave up. I used the Tailwind 4 documentation and Claude 3.5 sonnet in Windsurf IDE, and the part related to migration in my codebase was probably less than 50 lines. All of those tasks would take just a few minutes if a person did them directly (excluding reading the documents)
I think it would be appropriate to translate and share one of Korea's memes here.
Foreign Guy: I heard that there are refrigerators specifically for kimchi in Korea. Is that true?
Me: Yeah, not everyone in Korea has one, but I do.
Foreign Guy: I've asked this for the 10th time now, and everyone has answered the same way.