@marcelschmall I get it
For sure so many people are coming at once… but I think the intent from all those PRs is very genuine! So there’s two ways to look at it. But overall it seems the community is quite defensive, while it might be time to put lots of YouTube videos on how to share PR, how to behave, where to help etc. Because long term it’s definitely worth. And I did give donations to a fair share of projects too, even converted my mom to give to Debian 
blf_tpe@phpc.social
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🤖 Everyone talks about vibecoding but most definitions focus on how the code was created. -
🤖 Everyone talks about vibecoding but most definitions focus on how the code was created.But people like me don’t understand everything at first
So for existing members, rather than feeling threatened by ai or annoyed by low level feedback, it can be seen also as a huge opportunity to promote opensource to a very large new audience! (2/2) -
🤖 Everyone talks about vibecoding but most definitions focus on how the code was created.@marcelschmall Thinking about it, I feel there’s a misunderstanding in the community. Newbies like me feel empowered at first because coding is a bit magical, after a while we realize all the work that’s been done, how precious documentation, open-source etc is. And LLMs do bring lots of people to open-source ! (1/2)
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🤖 Everyone talks about vibecoding but most definitions focus on how the code was created.@marcelschmall Interesting take! After one year as a beginner vibe coder I agree with you. 1/ I can’t go beyond a few hundred lines of code without losing understanding of what the machine does. 2/ I do a lot of effort to understand what’s going on, reformat and it’s rewarding 3/ I still do a lot of mistakes and can be stuck with long debugging! But I also start to grasp how it works. It’s not all black and white.