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JohnMakintoday at 5:12 PM4 repliesview on HN

I don't necessarily disagree with this conclusion, but the way it is written has a lot of AI prose smell that was extremely distracting for me.


Replies

alwatoday at 5:36 PM

I’m inclined to take the author at their word that they’re a copywriter by trade.

I agree that the punchy staccato and the rhetorical questions smell AI-ish, but the way this person uses them, there’s, like, a payload each time. Versus LLM-speak, where the assertions are at best banal and more frequently just confusing.

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tmalytoday at 5:18 PM

I didn't get the AI vibe from it. At some point we are just going to have to get use to most stuff being written to some degree by AI.

There will be different shades of usage and maybe we draw a line somewhere in there.

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tolerancetoday at 5:40 PM

You have to be able to distinguish the scent of LLMs from the scent of Gary Halbert.

zzzeektoday at 5:54 PM

im either the biggest idiot in the world or this person is a terrible "copywriter". I found this post to be nearly unintelligible: "You can’t explain away someone else’s problem using your own problems." WTF does that mean? this would be a good place to put some very simplistic examples of what they mean, but they dont. is that because theyre trying to be succinct? clearly not as the post rambles on and on anyway. I hate posts that are both 1. not explaining their concept and 2. super long winded. That's a problem

are we just trying to say, "use AI for prototyping and customer demos that aren't important to be mature, use senior devs to develop and maintain the real products" ? You could just say that then...? Which I also disagree with as how AI should be used, AI is valid to include as a tool across all forms of development - it just should never be put in charge for production-level software (e.g. no vibe coding of mission critical components).