They'd probably present it differently from human answers.
If people really want to be careless they can get AI generated code from copilot or chatgpt on their own already, I don't think this would be worse than that.
Heh. After a couple years of normal conservatives being told their only place to go to voice complaints is 4chan you shouldn't be surprised that some of us took your advice and learned from the people there.
/g/ is full of intelligent people who could easily do what I do every day at work and are still unemployed.
It's not a lack of skills. Getting a job (especially your first) is a lot of work. In some ways IMO it's more work than what you would be payed to do. Once you get payed what do you do with the money? You spend it to participate in society.
Except most of our social institutions are gone anyway. Marriage (the larger motivator) is practically symbolic at this point. All that's left are the hard economic ideas, so they can spend it to live in their own place and not deal with their mom. Even those aren't doing so well, look at home ownership or even renting. Is it worth it? Some say yes and get jobs, plenty say no.
We've restructured society so there's no place for these men even if they did find jobs, then on top of that we've brought in millions more men to ensure if that any niche that developed would be immediately filled. This is what people really mean when they complain about low wages or high inflation and it's not something that can be fixed by fiddling with the money supply.
I've taught many people to program and can safely say python is an awful first language even for sighted users. Invisible characters being part of the syntax is awful.
Scheme IMO is the best for both sighted and blind people. There's very minimal syntax and I'd imagine a good editor with s-expression motions would make things much easier if you can't see.
If people can't choose who they socialize with they'd rather just not socialize.
Most of what you're seeing in the US is the result of one group pushing another group on a third group and the third group deciding that it's just not worth bothering.
You could probably use aluminum stock from eg Lowe's as rails. I built a bunch of solar panel brackets from that last year and remember being surprised by how cheap it was.
McMaster-carr is great but it's almost always crazy overpriced.
I recorded a couple video tutorials doing this with vim and openwatcom C. I never published them though.
I kind of want to start a channel for that sort of thing but haven't really decided on a format and keep going back and forth on it. I've built up a fair amount of unpublished footage at this point.
Most good blogs are part of something else and don't exist for their own sake. If your theory about books were true than the web would have killed them. It turns out having a carefully reviewed hard copy of the information is valuable so people still buy them. I highly doubt AI will change that.
I feel like non-free OSes like OSX and Windows are exhausting. Everything is driven by politics and PR rather than what actually works and it's all made artificially inflexible. Trivial things become rocket science because of this war over mind share.
I think it really depends on what you use at home though. I've run Linux as my primary OS from the beginning (when I got my first laptop at 10y/o.) If you use different technology at work and at home you're probably going to run into this. Something I've done in the past when this gets bad is to find excuses to use the technology at home (even if I think it's inferior to what I would have otherwise chosen.) This tends to resolve the problem even if I don't stick with it.