5 pointsby RobSpectre4 hours ago3 comments
  • chris_money2023 hours ago
    LLMs are really good at classical programming because they have plenty of examples to go off of. But what about quantum languages? What if those languages require drastially different syntaxes that we can't reasonable generate from primatives of classical computer languages. Won't we need a human to be trained and generate them?
  • GianFabien4 hours ago
    Even before recent AI capabilities, writing software was (now is) table stakes.

    Deep domain knowledge and expertise is essential. Until you actually work at the coal face in a given industry you don't know the complexity nor the opportunities for improvements. Talking to the workers is good, but you never get the complete picture.

  • dhruv30064 hours ago
    What about operating the software over time?
    • GianFabien4 hours ago
      Perhaps you could be more specific.

      For example, for architectural 3D modeling software, the operating the software is being the architect who visualises, designs and refines the building's design.