Become a fan of Slashdot on Facebook

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror

Comment Website (Score 3, Informative) 33

Here is his website. Nice, (but the top menu bar is among the most irritating I've ever seen).

Here is his code for the winning hackathon entry he made. It uses Gradio, which is a library I was unaware of, but looks interesting.

His linkedin has the following skills listed:

Deep Learning Neural Networks Machine Learning Python (Programming Language) Artificial Intelligence (AI) Data Science C++ Software Development Venture Capital Networking Pattern Recognition unreal engine Product Management TensorFlow PyTorch

Comment Re:Teach code reviewing (Score 2) 117

It's almost certainly because you didn't do enough programming in college.

Ideally an introduction course should be a course where you come in, sit down, and program all class period. For an entire semester. They can read the course material between classes (that is the new homework). By the end of the semester, the students will have written a lot of code, and have a decent introduction to programming.

Comment Re:I still get terrible results from "coding" agen (Score 1) 62

In each of these cases, you do have to know what you're doing, and you have to be able to know when it's right. But the things it does, do save me time and research effort.

Likewise.

They are just tools. Each user has to learn how to use them for their own use cases. They are neither panaceas nor useless.

Comment Re:Kind of automating a lot of preexisting tools . (Score 1) 62

In short, "AI coding" is not as mystical as it seems. Doing little that prior sets of tools were not doing. It's just more convenient, perhaps automating the use of numerous such existing tools. It still requires a skeptical review of the code and likely the addition of defensive code.

Right. It's a tool.

It's not the singularity, and it's also not "useless" like some energetic posters here want it to be. LLMs are just tools, which devs need to figure out how best to use for their use cases.

Slashdot Top Deals

Anyone can hold the helm when the sea is calm. -- Publius Syrus

Working...