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ralusekyesterday at 8:20 PM5 repliesview on HN

I'm a software engineer that, like the vast majority of you, uses AI/agents in my workflow every day. That being said, I have to admit that it feels a little weird to hear someone who does not write code say that they built something, without even mentioning that they had an agent build it (unless I missed that).


Replies

tekacsyesterday at 9:44 PM

Worth bearing in mind that people in VFX are often relatively technical.

From their own 'LLM handover' doc: https://github.com/nikopueringer/CorridorKey/blob/main/docs/...

> Be Proactive: The user is highly technical (a VFX professional/coder). Skip basic tutorials and dive straight into advanced implementation, but be sure to document math thoroughly.

krackerstoday at 6:22 AM

It's actually a bit refreshing that they didn't brand this with the usual "LLM hype". And it's actually a good example of someone using LLMs to solve a problem by bringing in their domain knowledge. (The solution is surprisingly simple though, I wonder if other people have done this before but kept it proprietary/in-house).

adamtaylor_13yesterday at 9:48 PM

This is interesting. I had the exact opposite reaction.

You don't hear architects get hounded because they say they "built" some building even though it was definitely the guys swinging hammers that built it. But yet, somehow because he didn't artisanally hand-craft the code, he needs to caveat that he didn't actually build it?

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F7F7F7today at 3:10 AM

Is a carpenter who relied on a CNC to cut all of their pieces a builder?

jrm4yesterday at 8:58 PM

I mean, the heading of the video says "he solved the problem," which I think is wise to pay a lot of attention to.