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[return to "2025: The Year in LLMs"]
1. websit+nc[view] [source] 2026-01-01 01:40:42
>>simonw+(OP)
I'm curious how all of the progress will be seen if it does indeed result in mass unemployment (but not eradication) of professional software engineers.
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2. ori_b+Pd[view] [source] 2026-01-01 01:55:10
>>websit+nc
My prediction: If we can successfully get rid of most software engineers, we can get rid of most knowledge work. Given the state of robotics, manual labor is likely to outlive intellectual labor.
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3. bearde+Bf[view] [source] 2026-01-01 02:15:46
>>ori_b+Pd
"Given the state of robotics" reminds me a lot of what was said about llms and image/video models over the past 3 years. Considering how much llms improved, how long can robotics be in this state?

I have to think 3 years from now we will be having the same conversation about robots doing real physical labor.

"This is the worst they will ever be" feels more apt.

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4. Davidz+4n[view] [source] 2026-01-01 03:34:57
>>bearde+Bf
Robotics is coming FAST. Faster than LLM progress in my opinion.
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5. throw1+DQ[view] [source] 2026-01-01 10:23:20
>>Davidz+4n
The question is how rapid the adoption is. The price of failure in the real world is much higher ($$$, environmental, physical risks) vs just "rebuild/regenerate" in the digital realm.
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6. bearde+Ls1[view] [source] 2026-01-01 16:21:22
>>throw1+DQ
Military adoption is probably a decent proxy indicator - and they are ready to hand the kill switch to autonomous robots
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