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[return to "Watching AI drive Microsoft employees insane"]
1. margor+72[view] [source] 2025-05-21 11:23:29
>>laiysb+(OP)
With how stochastic the process is it makes it basically unusable for any large scale task. What's the plan? To roll the dice until the answer pops up? That would be maybe viable if there was a way to automatically evaluate it 100% but with a human in the loop required it becomes untenable.
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2. eterev+J2[view] [source] 2025-05-21 11:33:07
>>margor+72
The plan is to improve AI agents from their current ~intern level to a level of a good engineer.
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3. ethano+l3[view] [source] 2025-05-21 11:38:38
>>eterev+J2
Seems like that is taking a very long time, on top of some very grandiose promises being delivered today.
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4. infect+K5[view] [source] 2025-05-21 11:58:42
>>ethano+l3
I look back over the past 2-3 years and am pretty amazed with how quick change and progress have been made. The promises are indeed large but the speed of progress has been fast. Not defending the promise but “taking a very long time” does not seem to be an accurate representation.
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5. owebma+b6[view] [source] 2025-05-21 12:02:18
>>infect+K5
> The promises are indeed large but the speed of progress has been fast

And at the same time, absurdly slow? ChatGPT is almost 3 years old and pretty much AI has still no positive economic impact.

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6. infect+t8[view] [source] 2025-05-21 12:18:46
>>owebma+b6
Saying “AI has no economic impact” ignores reality. The financials of major players clearly show otherwise—both B2C and B2B applications are already profitable and proven. While APIs are still more experimental, and it’s unclear how much value businesses can ultimately extract from them, to claim there’s no economic impact is willful blindness. AGI may be far off, but companies are already figuring out value from both the consumer side and slowly API.
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