25+ yr Java/JS dev
Linux novice - running Ubuntu (no windows/mac)

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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: October 14th, 2024

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  • There are certain positions I would probably be very good at from a technical perspective that I avoid because I know my myself. I could never work for the CIA or FBI for example. I don’t want to know their secrets because they could have me weigh a duty to execute my job and protect my family against my duty to humanity. I don’t know which principle I would betray, if grappling with it didn’t kill me first. Some might think that’s an easy choice but the personal cost is extreme — look at Snowden.

    No, keep me far away from that shit. Let me grapple with intellectual problems all day long, but moral quandaries paralyze me.


  • So I have frequently worked in projects where I don’t know how end users interact with the software. I can make code hum without knowing how it fits into the ecosystem. Sometimes that’s all the job is because that’s the structure.

    That said, I can contribute a lot more if I do understand the bigger picture. Domain knowledge helps me triage. It helps me propose effective alternatives. I’d say it is critical for understanding separation of concerns and deciding what compromises to recommended practices are reasonable.

    I reject this principle. You can write code without domain knowledge, but software by itself has no purpose until it meets users. And to write software that works best for users you have to understand them.

















  • MagicShel@lemmy.ziptoTechnology@lemmy.worldPeople Hate AI Art
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    4 days ago

    I use Suno a fair bit from time to time. I spend a lot of time refining the lyrics and then I play around with music generation until I find the right vehicle for them. It really scratches an itch because I haven’t written poetry for decades and I’ve never been able to write songs.

    The result is music I really enjoy listening to and is meaningful to me (“meaningful” in quotes because some of it is just pop fluff). But one else wants to listen to it. And that’s fine, I’m really just doing it for me.

    I have yet to hear anyone else’s AI generated songs that I gave a shit about, either. I think it’s like the uncanny valley, except I can’t tell the difference between generated and real music. But there’s a je ne sais quoi that real music has generated music just… lacks. And it’s only in the process of working on a piece that it takes on that quality, but only for the individual — probably because they attach to their input rather than the generated quality of the rest.

    Anyway, people will get away with AI stuff in the background where something real commands attention, but if you ever make it a focus, i think people will tune out. You can just feel the… soullessness.



  • We (my company) are trying to create agents that read a story and translate that into prompts, then execute said prompts, then review the output. The only piece missing is accepting the merge.

    I’m not anti-AI, but a human needs to be involved at every step because a minor mistake made at the first step will amplify through the agentic pipeline.

    A human should review every single thing that comes out of AI — especially if it is to be fed back into AI.