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idopmstuffyesterday at 6:34 PM4 repliesview on HN

Some people talk like skill atrophy is inevitable when you use LLMs, which strikes me as pretty absurd given that you are talking about a tool that will answer an infinite number of questions with infinite patience.

I usually learn way more by having Claude do a task and then quizzing it about what it did than by figuring out how to do it myself. When I have to figure out how to do the thing, it takes much more time, so when I'm done I have to move on immediately. When Claude does the task in ten minutes I now have several hours I can dedicate entirely to understanding.


Replies

onemoresoopyesterday at 6:42 PM

You lose some, you win some. The win could be short-term much higher, however imagine that the new tool suddenly gets ragged pulled from under your feet. What do you do then? Do you still know how to handle it the old way or do you run into skill atrophy issues? I’m using Claude/Codex as well, but I’m a little worried that the environment we work in will become a lot more bumpy and shifty.

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hdjrudniyesterday at 8:23 PM

The "infinite patience" thing I find particularly interesting.

Every now and then I pause before I ask an LLM to undo something it just did or answer something I know it answered already, somewhere. And then I remember oh yeah, it's an LLM, it's not going to get upset.

dlopes7yesterday at 8:01 PM

Asking infinite questions about something does not make you good at “doing” that thing, you get pretty good at asking questions

techpressionyesterday at 8:17 PM

Understanding is not learning. Zero effort gives zero rewards, I ask Claude plenty of things, I get answers but not learnings.