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  3. My experience with generative-AI has been that, at its very best, it is subtly wrong in ways that only an expert in the relevant subject would recognise.

My experience with generative-AI has been that, at its very best, it is subtly wrong in ways that only an expert in the relevant subject would recognise.

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  • jonathanhogg@mastodon.socialJ jonathanhogg@mastodon.social

    @dasgrueneblatt I think you have misunderstood me: I think vibe coding is a horrendous problem, but it is a symptom of an industry failing. That people are trying to steer a tank with a speak'n'spell is because we have not made decent bikes.

    dasgrueneblatt@wien.rocksD This user is from outside of this forum
    dasgrueneblatt@wien.rocksD This user is from outside of this forum
    dasgrueneblatt@wien.rocks
    wrote last edited by
    #25

    @jonathanhogg That's a great picture, thank you. Yes, vibe coding as a symptom.

    I need to think about this. Thank you for starting it.

    1 Reply Last reply
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    • jonathanhogg@mastodon.socialJ jonathanhogg@mastodon.social

      @michael @jarkman Fuck yes! I want a thousand languages to bloom. It seems like once everyone used to write their own language and we fell out of the habit. The Dragon Book used to be required reading for CS…

      thatsten@hachyderm.ioT This user is from outside of this forum
      thatsten@hachyderm.ioT This user is from outside of this forum
      thatsten@hachyderm.io
      wrote last edited by
      #26

      @jonathanhogg @michael @jarkman I once asked a very senior HPC developer at Red Hat what keeps him up at night and he said, paraphrasing and pulling from memory that's about 15 years old now, "we haven't created new computer science since the 1960s and I fear we'll exhaust what we know before we discover anything new," and I think about that a lot these days.

      1 Reply Last reply
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      • jonathanhogg@mastodon.socialJ jonathanhogg@mastodon.social

        You know what? HyperCard was a glorious moment in time that I dearly miss: an army of non-experts were bashing together and sharing weird and wonderful stacks that were part 'zine, part adventure game and part database. Instead of laughing at vibe-coders, maybe we should ask ourselves why the current state-of-the-art in beginner-friendly programming tools is a planet-boiling roulette wheel.

        ireneista@adhd.irenes.spaceI This user is from outside of this forum
        ireneista@adhd.irenes.spaceI This user is from outside of this forum
        ireneista@adhd.irenes.space
        wrote last edited by
        #27

        @jonathanhogg well put

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        • jonathanhogg@mastodon.socialJ jonathanhogg@mastodon.social

          You know what? HyperCard was a glorious moment in time that I dearly miss: an army of non-experts were bashing together and sharing weird and wonderful stacks that were part 'zine, part adventure game and part database. Instead of laughing at vibe-coders, maybe we should ask ourselves why the current state-of-the-art in beginner-friendly programming tools is a planet-boiling roulette wheel.

          pikesley@mastodon.me.ukP This user is from outside of this forum
          pikesley@mastodon.me.ukP This user is from outside of this forum
          pikesley@mastodon.me.uk
          wrote last edited by
          #28

          @jonathanhogg

          "planet-boiling roulette wheel" is the name of my upcoming experimental jazzcore EP

          thechaoszone@chaos.socialT 1 Reply Last reply
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          • jonathanhogg@mastodon.socialJ jonathanhogg@mastodon.social

            We seem to have largely stopped innovating on trying to lower barriers to programming in favour of creating endless new frameworks and libraries for a vanishingly small number of near-identical languages. It is the mid-2020s and people are wringing their hands over Rust as if it was some inexplicable new thing rather than a C-derivative that incorporates decades old type theory. You know what I consider to be genuinely ground-breaking programming tools? VisiCalc, HyperCard and Scratch.

            ireneista@adhd.irenes.spaceI This user is from outside of this forum
            ireneista@adhd.irenes.spaceI This user is from outside of this forum
            ireneista@adhd.irenes.space
            wrote last edited by
            #29

            @jonathanhogg you're right, but also, it's more than that - today's tooling is worse for non-experts than the stuff that used to exist

            because it's designed around corporate priorities, not individual ones. it's the factory looms problem.

            emily_s@mastodon.me.ukE 1 Reply Last reply
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            • jonathanhogg@mastodon.socialJ jonathanhogg@mastodon.social

              You know what? HyperCard was a glorious moment in time that I dearly miss: an army of non-experts were bashing together and sharing weird and wonderful stacks that were part 'zine, part adventure game and part database. Instead of laughing at vibe-coders, maybe we should ask ourselves why the current state-of-the-art in beginner-friendly programming tools is a planet-boiling roulette wheel.

              staceycornelius@zeroes.caS This user is from outside of this forum
              staceycornelius@zeroes.caS This user is from outside of this forum
              staceycornelius@zeroes.ca
              wrote last edited by
              #30

              @jonathanhogg HyperCard was great.

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              • jonathanhogg@mastodon.socialJ jonathanhogg@mastodon.social

                You know what? HyperCard was a glorious moment in time that I dearly miss: an army of non-experts were bashing together and sharing weird and wonderful stacks that were part 'zine, part adventure game and part database. Instead of laughing at vibe-coders, maybe we should ask ourselves why the current state-of-the-art in beginner-friendly programming tools is a planet-boiling roulette wheel.

                raganwald@social.bau-ha.usR This user is from outside of this forum
                raganwald@social.bau-ha.usR This user is from outside of this forum
                raganwald@social.bau-ha.us
                wrote last edited by
                #31

                @jonathanhogg A quarter-century ago, we were developing a new version of JProbe, and as we got close to the day we had to send the golden master to the factory to manufacture CDs, we were short a settings configuration tool.

                The team were told to skip the GUI editor and work on mission-critical features. Meanwhile, the program manager spent a weekend writing the editor in HyperCard, packaged with Metacard, a tool now known as LiveCode: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LiveCode_(company)

                We shipped it.

                Link Preview Image
                raganwald@social.bau-ha.usR 1 Reply Last reply
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                • ireneista@adhd.irenes.spaceI ireneista@adhd.irenes.space

                  @jonathanhogg you're right, but also, it's more than that - today's tooling is worse for non-experts than the stuff that used to exist

                  because it's designed around corporate priorities, not individual ones. it's the factory looms problem.

                  emily_s@mastodon.me.ukE This user is from outside of this forum
                  emily_s@mastodon.me.ukE This user is from outside of this forum
                  emily_s@mastodon.me.uk
                  wrote last edited by
                  #32

                  @ireneista @jonathanhogg this. It effects small businesses too. What works for a thousand or even 100 engineers doesn't work for 5.

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                  • raganwald@social.bau-ha.usR raganwald@social.bau-ha.us

                    @jonathanhogg A quarter-century ago, we were developing a new version of JProbe, and as we got close to the day we had to send the golden master to the factory to manufacture CDs, we were short a settings configuration tool.

                    The team were told to skip the GUI editor and work on mission-critical features. Meanwhile, the program manager spent a weekend writing the editor in HyperCard, packaged with Metacard, a tool now known as LiveCode: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LiveCode_(company)

                    We shipped it.

                    Link Preview Image
                    raganwald@social.bau-ha.usR This user is from outside of this forum
                    raganwald@social.bau-ha.usR This user is from outside of this forum
                    raganwald@social.bau-ha.us
                    wrote last edited by
                    #33

                    @jonathanhogg Afterward:

                    The program manager eventually left the company, and the team immediately rewrote the editor in Java/Swing. It took a summer, but now the company could brag that it used Java exclusively to write tools for Java.

                    I certainly never met a customer who cared whether the editor was written in Java. For that matter, nobody cared that the core analysis engine was written in C++.

                    Programming is a pop culture.

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                    • jonathanhogg@mastodon.socialJ jonathanhogg@mastodon.social

                      You know what? HyperCard was a glorious moment in time that I dearly miss: an army of non-experts were bashing together and sharing weird and wonderful stacks that were part 'zine, part adventure game and part database. Instead of laughing at vibe-coders, maybe we should ask ourselves why the current state-of-the-art in beginner-friendly programming tools is a planet-boiling roulette wheel.

                      jonathanhogg@mastodon.socialJ This user is from outside of this forum
                      jonathanhogg@mastodon.socialJ This user is from outside of this forum
                      jonathanhogg@mastodon.social
                      wrote last edited by
                      #34

                      On the gripping hand, if you're a trained programmer using vibe-coding because of a perceived increase in your productivity, or pressure from management to increase your productivity, I would refer you to my first post in this thread…

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                      • jonathanhogg@mastodon.socialJ jonathanhogg@mastodon.social

                        You know what? HyperCard was a glorious moment in time that I dearly miss: an army of non-experts were bashing together and sharing weird and wonderful stacks that were part 'zine, part adventure game and part database. Instead of laughing at vibe-coders, maybe we should ask ourselves why the current state-of-the-art in beginner-friendly programming tools is a planet-boiling roulette wheel.

                        fozztexx@mastodon.fozztexx.comF This user is from outside of this forum
                        fozztexx@mastodon.fozztexx.comF This user is from outside of this forum
                        fozztexx@mastodon.fozztexx.com
                        wrote last edited by
                        #35

                        @jonathanhogg HyperCard was *amazing* and I don't understand why there's nothing like it anymore. It was like building programs with Lego. Just snap things together, write your program in a very natural language, and do incredible things. It was so easy to double click on something and add a few lines of code. I remember also having fun with the flexibility of the language and constantly trying to see what different syntax I could get away with.

                        1 Reply Last reply
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                        • jonathanhogg@mastodon.socialJ jonathanhogg@mastodon.social

                          You know what? HyperCard was a glorious moment in time that I dearly miss: an army of non-experts were bashing together and sharing weird and wonderful stacks that were part 'zine, part adventure game and part database. Instead of laughing at vibe-coders, maybe we should ask ourselves why the current state-of-the-art in beginner-friendly programming tools is a planet-boiling roulette wheel.

                          requiem@masto.hackers.townR This user is from outside of this forum
                          requiem@masto.hackers.townR This user is from outside of this forum
                          requiem@masto.hackers.town
                          wrote last edited by
                          #36

                          @jonathanhogg this is my central response to the "AI makes software development accessible" argument.

                          Once upon a time anyone could program their personal computer using a book that came with it. We taught it to all the kids in my tiny town's elementary school. My shopkeep neighbor and our local mechanic wrote their own custom software with no CS background.

                          BASIC, Hypercard, personal computers, printed manuals > LLM's.

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                          • R relay@relay.infosec.exchange shared this topic
                          • jonathanhogg@mastodon.socialJ jonathanhogg@mastodon.social

                            My experience with generative-AI has been that, at its very best, it is subtly wrong in ways that only an expert in the relevant subject would recognise. So I don't worry about us creating super-intelligent AI, I worry about us allowing that expertise to atrophy through laziness and greed. I refuse to use LLMs not because I'm scared of how clever they are, but because I do not wish to become stupider.

                            tobiaspatton@cosocial.caT This user is from outside of this forum
                            tobiaspatton@cosocial.caT This user is from outside of this forum
                            tobiaspatton@cosocial.ca
                            wrote last edited by
                            #37

                            @jonathanhogg this is nicely put.

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                            • R relay@relay.mycrowd.ca shared this topic
                            • pikesley@mastodon.me.ukP pikesley@mastodon.me.uk

                              @jonathanhogg

                              "planet-boiling roulette wheel" is the name of my upcoming experimental jazzcore EP

                              thechaoszone@chaos.socialT This user is from outside of this forum
                              thechaoszone@chaos.socialT This user is from outside of this forum
                              thechaoszone@chaos.social
                              wrote last edited by
                              #38

                              @pikesley @jonathanhogg looking forward to watching them at EMF later this year

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                              • jonathanhogg@mastodon.socialJ jonathanhogg@mastodon.social

                                My experience with generative-AI has been that, at its very best, it is subtly wrong in ways that only an expert in the relevant subject would recognise. So I don't worry about us creating super-intelligent AI, I worry about us allowing that expertise to atrophy through laziness and greed. I refuse to use LLMs not because I'm scared of how clever they are, but because I do not wish to become stupider.

                                kevinrns@mstdn.socialK This user is from outside of this forum
                                kevinrns@mstdn.socialK This user is from outside of this forum
                                kevinrns@mstdn.social
                                wrote last edited by
                                #39

                                @jonathanhogg

                                The big problem isn't people allowing AI into their work. They should fight back, you're exactly right.

                                The big problem is tech bros dont care, they BOUGHT ALL the Ram, they bought ALL the hard drives on the planet.

                                They intend -> no choice, there will be no allow or not allow, they are building an AI prison around earth.

                                They bought all the hard drives.

                                They bought all the ram

                                Link Preview Image
                                Sam Altman’s Dirty DRAM Deal

                                Or: How the AI Bubble, Panic, and Unpreparedness Stole ChristmasWritten by Tom of Moore’s Law Is DeadSpecial Assistance by KarbinCry & kari-no-sugataBased on this Video: https://youtu.be/BORRBce5TGwIntroduction — The Day the RAM Market SnappedAt the beginning of November, I ordered a 32GB DDR5 kit for pairing with a Minisforum BD790i X3D motherboard, and three weeks later those very same sticks of DDR5 are now listed for a staggering $330– a 156% increase in price from less than a month ago! At

                                favicon

                                Moore's Law Is Dead (www.mooreslawisdead.com)

                                AI is prison.

                                #ai #AIisPRISON #techbroligarchy #resist #dems #nokings

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                                • jonathanhogg@mastodon.socialJ jonathanhogg@mastodon.social

                                  You know what? HyperCard was a glorious moment in time that I dearly miss: an army of non-experts were bashing together and sharing weird and wonderful stacks that were part 'zine, part adventure game and part database. Instead of laughing at vibe-coders, maybe we should ask ourselves why the current state-of-the-art in beginner-friendly programming tools is a planet-boiling roulette wheel.

                                  yala@degrowth.socialY This user is from outside of this forum
                                  yala@degrowth.socialY This user is from outside of this forum
                                  yala@degrowth.social
                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #40

                                  @jonathanhogg
                                  Help us get the federated wiki there.

                                  It is more than a successor in spirit to HyperCard.

                                  You would be surprised to learn about what #FedWiki does.

                                  Link Preview Image
                                  What Wiki Does

                                  favicon

                                  (next.ward.dojo.fed.wiki)

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                                  • jonathanhogg@mastodon.socialJ jonathanhogg@mastodon.social

                                    @jarkman I can absolutely bend your ear at EMF, but conveniently I also recently gave a talk about it at Alpaca! 😀

                                    - YouTube

                                    Auf YouTube findest du die angesagtesten Videos und Tracks. Außerdem kannst du eigene Inhalte hochladen und mit Freunden oder gleich der ganzen Welt teilen.

                                    favicon

                                    (www.youtube.com)

                                    gklyne@indieweb.socialG This user is from outside of this forum
                                    gklyne@indieweb.socialG This user is from outside of this forum
                                    gklyne@indieweb.social
                                    wrote last edited by
                                    #41

                                    @jarkman @jonathanhogg Would love to have my ear bent about Flitter at EMF 😀. Are you planning to do your talk there? (I guess there’s that YouTube you posted, but I kind of like live performance 😜)

                                    jonathanhogg@mastodon.socialJ 1 Reply Last reply
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                                    • jonathanhogg@mastodon.socialJ jonathanhogg@mastodon.social

                                      I will say one thing for generative AI: since these tools function by remixing/translating existing information, that vibe programming is so popular demonstrates a colossal failure on the part of our industry in not making this stuff easier. If a giant ball of statistics can mostly knock up a working app in minutes, this shows not that gen-AI is insanely clever, but that most of the work in making an app has always been stupid. We have gatekeeped programming behind vast walls of nonsense.

                                      dietasse@floss.socialD This user is from outside of this forum
                                      dietasse@floss.socialD This user is from outside of this forum
                                      dietasse@floss.social
                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #42

                                      @jonathanhogg
                                      Feel free to devise non-gatekept programming 😀

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                                      • gklyne@indieweb.socialG gklyne@indieweb.social

                                        @jarkman @jonathanhogg Would love to have my ear bent about Flitter at EMF 😀. Are you planning to do your talk there? (I guess there’s that YouTube you posted, but I kind of like live performance 😜)

                                        jonathanhogg@mastodon.socialJ This user is from outside of this forum
                                        jonathanhogg@mastodon.socialJ This user is from outside of this forum
                                        jonathanhogg@mastodon.social
                                        wrote last edited by
                                        #43

                                        @gklyne @jarkman I wasn’t planning to. As a team lead I’m not supposed to put myself up for a talk as well, though I think that’s more of a guideline than a rule…

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                                        • jonathanhogg@mastodon.socialJ jonathanhogg@mastodon.social

                                          @jarkman I can absolutely bend your ear at EMF, but conveniently I also recently gave a talk about it at Alpaca! 😀

                                          - YouTube

                                          Auf YouTube findest du die angesagtesten Videos und Tracks. Außerdem kannst du eigene Inhalte hochladen und mit Freunden oder gleich der ganzen Welt teilen.

                                          favicon

                                          (www.youtube.com)

                                          jarkman@chaos.socialJ This user is from outside of this forum
                                          jarkman@chaos.socialJ This user is from outside of this forum
                                          jarkman@chaos.social
                                          wrote last edited by
                                          #44

                                          @jonathanhogg Thanks! I'll absorb that and then I can ask you better questions at EMF.

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