If I was on the "replace all the meatsacks AGI ftw" team then I would have referred to it as an oracle, by your own logic, wouldn't I have?
It's a tool. It's good for some things, not for others. Use the right tool for the job and know the job well enough to know which tools apply to which tasks.
More than anything it's a learning tool. It's also wildly effective at writing code, too. But, man... the things that it makes available to the curious mind are rather unreal.
I used it to help me turn a cat exercise wheel (think huge hamster wheel) into a generator that produces enough power to charge a battery that powers an ESP32 powered "CYD" touchscreen LCD that also utilizes a hall effect sensor to monitor, log and display the RPMs and "speed" (given we know the wheel circumference) in real time as well as historically.
I didn't know anything about all this stuff before I started. I didn't AGI myself here. I used a learning tool.
But keep up with your schtick if that's what you want to do.
>I used it to help me turn a cat exercise wheel (think huge hamster wheel) into a generator that produces enough power to charge a battery that powers an ESP32 powered "CYD" touchscreen LCD that also utilizes a hall effect sensor to monitor, log and display the RPMs and "speed" (given we know the wheel circumference) in real time as well as historically.
So what? That's honestly amateur hour. And the LLM derived all of it from things that have been done and posted about a thousand times before.
You could have achieved the same thing with a few google searches 15 years ago (obviously not with ESP32, but other microcontrollers).
Oracles have their use too, but as long as you keep confusing "oracle" and "tool" you will get nowhere.
P.S. The real big deal is the democratization of oracles. Back in the day building an oracle was a megaproject accessible only to megacorps like Google. Today you can build one for nothing if you have a gaming GPU and use it for powering your kobold text adventure session.