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  3. IBM crashes because we’re gonna YOLO a replacement for banking and credit-card back-ends, replacing billions of lines of COBOL with vibe code.

IBM crashes because we’re gonna YOLO a replacement for banking and credit-card back-ends, replacing billions of lines of COBOL with vibe code.

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  • brooke@bikeshed.vibber.netB brooke@bikeshed.vibber.net

    @timbray it's cool how facts don't matter in the stock market. it's just vibe finance

    scruss@xoxo.zoneS This user is from outside of this forum
    scruss@xoxo.zoneS This user is from outside of this forum
    scruss@xoxo.zone
    wrote last edited by
    #4

    @brooke @timbray
    s/stock market/rich people's yacht money/g was never more true

    changemewtf@mastodon.onlineC 1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • timbray@cosocial.caT timbray@cosocial.ca

      IBM crashes because we’re gonna YOLO a replacement for banking and credit-card back-ends, replacing billions of lines of COBOL with vibe code. Uh…

      Link Preview Image
      IBM Crashes 11% as Anthropic Threatens COBOL Empire

      Anthropic's AI disrupts IBM's mainframe business, sending shares down 11% on threat

      favicon

      (www.techbuzz.ai)

      ibboard@hachyderm.ioI This user is from outside of this forum
      ibboard@hachyderm.ioI This user is from outside of this forum
      ibboard@hachyderm.io
      wrote last edited by
      #5

      @timbray "If Anthropic's Claude or other large language models can understand, maintain, modernize, or even replace COBOL systems…"

      That "If" is doing a LOT of heavy lifting!

      capeta@ursal.zoneC 1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • timbray@cosocial.caT timbray@cosocial.ca

        IBM crashes because we’re gonna YOLO a replacement for banking and credit-card back-ends, replacing billions of lines of COBOL with vibe code. Uh…

        Link Preview Image
        IBM Crashes 11% as Anthropic Threatens COBOL Empire

        Anthropic's AI disrupts IBM's mainframe business, sending shares down 11% on threat

        favicon

        (www.techbuzz.ai)

        ivor@social.ivor.orgI This user is from outside of this forum
        ivor@social.ivor.orgI This user is from outside of this forum
        ivor@social.ivor.org
        wrote last edited by
        #6

        @timbray JFC... The "efficient-market hypothesis" proving it's worth. 🤦‍♂️

        1 Reply Last reply
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        • brooke@bikeshed.vibber.netB brooke@bikeshed.vibber.net

          @timbray it's cool how facts don't matter in the stock market. it's just vibe finance

          ibboard@hachyderm.ioI This user is from outside of this forum
          ibboard@hachyderm.ioI This user is from outside of this forum
          ibboard@hachyderm.io
          wrote last edited by
          #7

          @brooke @timbray I was talking to a colleague about that recently. He was talking about his stock trading models and the issues he was having with training them.

          I tried to tell him that stock trading is just vibe-coding for stocks. He then tried to explain how it wasn't, starting with "Okay, so think of a brand that you engage with every day…" and I just looked blankly at him because… why would I pay attention to the brands?!

          The rest of the discussion was then "So, I've got an Apple phone, so I think other people will want one, so I think they'll do well, so I invest in them". Which is just Vibes. And nothing about when to sell to actually make a profit 😐

          1 Reply Last reply
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          • timbray@cosocial.caT timbray@cosocial.ca

            IBM crashes because we’re gonna YOLO a replacement for banking and credit-card back-ends, replacing billions of lines of COBOL with vibe code. Uh…

            Link Preview Image
            IBM Crashes 11% as Anthropic Threatens COBOL Empire

            Anthropic's AI disrupts IBM's mainframe business, sending shares down 11% on threat

            favicon

            (www.techbuzz.ai)

            nlowell@zirk.usN This user is from outside of this forum
            nlowell@zirk.usN This user is from outside of this forum
            nlowell@zirk.us
            wrote last edited by
            #8

            @timbray

            What could possibly go wrong.

            I worked on those COBOL systems for much of my programming career. Made good living maintaining 60s and 70s spaghetti code (literally. the comments were all in Italian. I'm not kidding).

            Having AI guessing what the code might look like should give chills to everybody who uses money.

            ivor@social.ivor.orgI nukleos@mendeddrum.orgN theorangetheme@en.osm.townT dank@jorts.horseD andymoose@fedi.aiga.rocksA 5 Replies Last reply
            0
            • nlowell@zirk.usN nlowell@zirk.us

              @timbray

              What could possibly go wrong.

              I worked on those COBOL systems for much of my programming career. Made good living maintaining 60s and 70s spaghetti code (literally. the comments were all in Italian. I'm not kidding).

              Having AI guessing what the code might look like should give chills to everybody who uses money.

              ivor@social.ivor.orgI This user is from outside of this forum
              ivor@social.ivor.orgI This user is from outside of this forum
              ivor@social.ivor.org
              wrote last edited by
              #9

              @nlowell @timbray I see stuff like this and say to myself "nobody can be that stupid"... but then I'm frequently proven wrong.

              1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • nlowell@zirk.usN nlowell@zirk.us

                @timbray

                What could possibly go wrong.

                I worked on those COBOL systems for much of my programming career. Made good living maintaining 60s and 70s spaghetti code (literally. the comments were all in Italian. I'm not kidding).

                Having AI guessing what the code might look like should give chills to everybody who uses money.

                nukleos@mendeddrum.orgN This user is from outside of this forum
                nukleos@mendeddrum.orgN This user is from outside of this forum
                nukleos@mendeddrum.org
                wrote last edited by
                #10

                @nlowell @timbray I love the “Italian connection” !

                sandorspruit@mastodon.nlS 1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • timbray@cosocial.caT timbray@cosocial.ca

                  IBM crashes because we’re gonna YOLO a replacement for banking and credit-card back-ends, replacing billions of lines of COBOL with vibe code. Uh…

                  Link Preview Image
                  IBM Crashes 11% as Anthropic Threatens COBOL Empire

                  Anthropic's AI disrupts IBM's mainframe business, sending shares down 11% on threat

                  favicon

                  (www.techbuzz.ai)

                  worik@mastodon.socialW This user is from outside of this forum
                  worik@mastodon.socialW This user is from outside of this forum
                  worik@mastodon.social
                  wrote last edited by
                  #11

                  @timbray

                  > COBOL systems are so old that any viable alternative becomes immediately attractive.

                  A tech journalist said that. We're doomed, if we cannot build IT infrastructure that can last for decades.

                  Good news is we can.

                  Bad news is there is more profit in new crap than in maintaining the existing infrastructure

                  Software, generally, socks mostly for that reason. And they are laying off all the computer programmers...

                  zbrown@floss.socialZ 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • nlowell@zirk.usN nlowell@zirk.us

                    @timbray

                    What could possibly go wrong.

                    I worked on those COBOL systems for much of my programming career. Made good living maintaining 60s and 70s spaghetti code (literally. the comments were all in Italian. I'm not kidding).

                    Having AI guessing what the code might look like should give chills to everybody who uses money.

                    theorangetheme@en.osm.townT This user is from outside of this forum
                    theorangetheme@en.osm.townT This user is from outside of this forum
                    theorangetheme@en.osm.town
                    wrote last edited by
                    #12

                    @nlowell @timbray First of all, thank you for the work that you did. I'm sure it benefitted countless people. 🙂

                    At this point, I'm just trying to be resilient for when the system collapses. If the people running society are hellbent on ruining it, all we can do is try our best, and coordinate with each other for when it happens.

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • timbray@cosocial.caT timbray@cosocial.ca

                      IBM crashes because we’re gonna YOLO a replacement for banking and credit-card back-ends, replacing billions of lines of COBOL with vibe code. Uh…

                      Link Preview Image
                      IBM Crashes 11% as Anthropic Threatens COBOL Empire

                      Anthropic's AI disrupts IBM's mainframe business, sending shares down 11% on threat

                      favicon

                      (www.techbuzz.ai)

                      pizzademon@mastodon.onlineP This user is from outside of this forum
                      pizzademon@mastodon.onlineP This user is from outside of this forum
                      pizzademon@mastodon.online
                      wrote last edited by
                      #13

                      @timbray

                      Link Preview Image
                      1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • nlowell@zirk.usN nlowell@zirk.us

                        @timbray

                        What could possibly go wrong.

                        I worked on those COBOL systems for much of my programming career. Made good living maintaining 60s and 70s spaghetti code (literally. the comments were all in Italian. I'm not kidding).

                        Having AI guessing what the code might look like should give chills to everybody who uses money.

                        dank@jorts.horseD This user is from outside of this forum
                        dank@jorts.horseD This user is from outside of this forum
                        dank@jorts.horse
                        wrote last edited by
                        #14

                        @nlowell @timbray

                        this jokers me every time it comes up. every single bank and many large corps that do similar settlement processes have looked at this every five to ten years. for fifty years.

                        the architecture is specialized to perform huge numbers of tiny processes. every single time something new is stood up they find the same thing: COTS hardware and "modern" languages significantly underperform what's already in place.

                        i wish this lesson stayed learned.

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • nukleos@mendeddrum.orgN nukleos@mendeddrum.org

                          @nlowell @timbray I love the “Italian connection” !

                          sandorspruit@mastodon.nlS This user is from outside of this forum
                          sandorspruit@mastodon.nlS This user is from outside of this forum
                          sandorspruit@mastodon.nl
                          wrote last edited by
                          #15

                          @nukleos @nlowell @timbray The original Italian Job without the cool Mini Coopers 😃

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • timbray@cosocial.caT timbray@cosocial.ca

                            IBM crashes because we’re gonna YOLO a replacement for banking and credit-card back-ends, replacing billions of lines of COBOL with vibe code. Uh…

                            Link Preview Image
                            IBM Crashes 11% as Anthropic Threatens COBOL Empire

                            Anthropic's AI disrupts IBM's mainframe business, sending shares down 11% on threat

                            favicon

                            (www.techbuzz.ai)

                            michaelormsby@mastodon.artM This user is from outside of this forum
                            michaelormsby@mastodon.artM This user is from outside of this forum
                            michaelormsby@mastodon.art
                            wrote last edited by
                            #16

                            @timbray I wonder if there are deeper issues not mentioned in the article? I have heard anecdotally that one of the problems of the COBOL culture is that the practitioners are literally dying off without fresh talent replacing them. Which leaves billions of lines of rock solid but terribly obscure and hard-to-maintain COBOL code. Not to mention the proprietary nature of the underlying hardware architecture.

                            seindal@mastodon.unoS 1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • timbray@cosocial.caT timbray@cosocial.ca

                              IBM crashes because we’re gonna YOLO a replacement for banking and credit-card back-ends, replacing billions of lines of COBOL with vibe code. Uh…

                              Link Preview Image
                              IBM Crashes 11% as Anthropic Threatens COBOL Empire

                              Anthropic's AI disrupts IBM's mainframe business, sending shares down 11% on threat

                              favicon

                              (www.techbuzz.ai)

                              atleagle@mastodon.onlineA This user is from outside of this forum
                              atleagle@mastodon.onlineA This user is from outside of this forum
                              atleagle@mastodon.online
                              wrote last edited by
                              #17

                              @timbray the a ary bit is that Claude "understands" available code, in whatever language is popularly used amd available. So its not ever going to know cool and collect any collective solutions. This will cause the owners of the code to have Claude convert working old stuff that costs money to maintain into new vibe slop that the stupid AI can "debug" and "fix"

                              Everything will suddenly become average to bad python

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • timbray@cosocial.caT timbray@cosocial.ca

                                IBM crashes because we’re gonna YOLO a replacement for banking and credit-card back-ends, replacing billions of lines of COBOL with vibe code. Uh…

                                Link Preview Image
                                IBM Crashes 11% as Anthropic Threatens COBOL Empire

                                Anthropic's AI disrupts IBM's mainframe business, sending shares down 11% on threat

                                favicon

                                (www.techbuzz.ai)

                                billseitz@toolsforthought.socialB This user is from outside of this forum
                                billseitz@toolsforthought.socialB This user is from outside of this forum
                                billseitz@toolsforthought.social
                                wrote last edited by
                                #18

                                @timbray

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                                1 Reply Last reply
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                                • worik@mastodon.socialW worik@mastodon.social

                                  @timbray

                                  > COBOL systems are so old that any viable alternative becomes immediately attractive.

                                  A tech journalist said that. We're doomed, if we cannot build IT infrastructure that can last for decades.

                                  Good news is we can.

                                  Bad news is there is more profit in new crap than in maintaining the existing infrastructure

                                  Software, generally, socks mostly for that reason. And they are laying off all the computer programmers...

                                  zbrown@floss.socialZ This user is from outside of this forum
                                  zbrown@floss.socialZ This user is from outside of this forum
                                  zbrown@floss.social
                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #19

                                  @worik @timbray there are plenty of real problems with COBOL, including how increasingly unviable it has become to maintain these code bases.

                                  The problem with the statement is the implication if not assertion that ‘AI’ is ‘a viable alternative’.

                                  M 1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • R relay@relay.mycrowd.ca shared this topic
                                  • michaelormsby@mastodon.artM michaelormsby@mastodon.art

                                    @timbray I wonder if there are deeper issues not mentioned in the article? I have heard anecdotally that one of the problems of the COBOL culture is that the practitioners are literally dying off without fresh talent replacing them. Which leaves billions of lines of rock solid but terribly obscure and hard-to-maintain COBOL code. Not to mention the proprietary nature of the underlying hardware architecture.

                                    seindal@mastodon.unoS This user is from outside of this forum
                                    seindal@mastodon.unoS This user is from outside of this forum
                                    seindal@mastodon.uno
                                    wrote last edited by
                                    #20

                                    @michaelormsby @timbray

                                    The main probe with Cobol is that it takes at least three years just to get into Environment Division.

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • zbrown@floss.socialZ zbrown@floss.social

                                      @worik @timbray there are plenty of real problems with COBOL, including how increasingly unviable it has become to maintain these code bases.

                                      The problem with the statement is the implication if not assertion that ‘AI’ is ‘a viable alternative’.

                                      M This user is from outside of this forum
                                      M This user is from outside of this forum
                                      mike805@noc.social
                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #21

                                      @zbrown @worik @timbray Last time they laid off all the COBOL programmers, Y2K happened and they had to go hat in hand to the retired people. A lot of older programmers got a serious upgrade to their retirement.

                                      The fact something lasted decades is good, not bad. If software is going to be infrastructure then it needs to be built like infrastructure.

                                      What are the AI vibe coders going to do when they have to maintain a code base and the AI model that "wrote" it is discontinued? 1/2

                                      M 1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • M mike805@noc.social

                                        @zbrown @worik @timbray Last time they laid off all the COBOL programmers, Y2K happened and they had to go hat in hand to the retired people. A lot of older programmers got a serious upgrade to their retirement.

                                        The fact something lasted decades is good, not bad. If software is going to be infrastructure then it needs to be built like infrastructure.

                                        What are the AI vibe coders going to do when they have to maintain a code base and the AI model that "wrote" it is discontinued? 1/2

                                        M This user is from outside of this forum
                                        M This user is from outside of this forum
                                        mike805@noc.social
                                        wrote last edited by
                                        #22

                                        @zbrown @worik @timbray Everyone is worried about programmers losing their jobs to AI. From what I am seeing (and I support both kinds of code) there is going to be lots of work for humans fixing what the AIs broke.

                                        One of the basic problems with this technological era is that production is automated and efficient. Repair is still a medieval craft. Look at current generation cars which are nearly unfixable if they get in an accident. AI is making programming like making cars. 2/2

                                        1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • nlowell@zirk.usN nlowell@zirk.us

                                          @timbray

                                          What could possibly go wrong.

                                          I worked on those COBOL systems for much of my programming career. Made good living maintaining 60s and 70s spaghetti code (literally. the comments were all in Italian. I'm not kidding).

                                          Having AI guessing what the code might look like should give chills to everybody who uses money.

                                          andymoose@fedi.aiga.rocksA This user is from outside of this forum
                                          andymoose@fedi.aiga.rocksA This user is from outside of this forum
                                          andymoose@fedi.aiga.rocks
                                          wrote last edited by
                                          #23

                                          @nlowell @FknHannu @timbray What I want to know is how these models could possibly have been trained on enough COBOL to be even slightly correct. Are there mountains of public repos of COBOL I’m not aware of?

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