> because that article is full of Claude-isms
Not sure how I feel about the whole "LLMs learned from human texts, so now the people who helped write human texts are suddenly accused of plagiarizing LLMs" thing yet, but seems backwards so far and like a low quality criticism.
I'm sure some human writers would write:
> The specification forces this question on every path through the IMU mode-switching code. A reviewer examining BADEND would see correct, complete cleanup for every resource BADEND was designed to handle.
> The specification approaches from the other direction: starting from LGYRO and asking whether any paths fail to clear it.
> *Tests verify the code as written; a behavioural specification asks what the code is for.*
However this is a blog post about using Claude for XYZ, from an AI company whose tagline is
"AI-assisted engineering that unlocks your organization's potential"
Do you really think they spent the time required to actually write a good article by hand? My guess is that they are unlocking their own organizations potential by having Claude writes the posts.
Real talk. You're not just making a good point -- you're questioning the dominant paradigm