It sounds like you're trying to use these llms as oracles, which is going to cause you a lot of frustration. I've found almost all of them now excel at imitating a junior dev or a drunk PhD student. For example the other day I was looking at acoustic sensor data and I ran it down the trail of "what are some ways to look for repeating patterns like xyz" and 10 minutes later I had a mostly working proof of concept for a 2nd order spectrogram that reasonably dealt with spectral leakage and a half working mel spectrum fingerprint idea. Those are all things I was thinking about myself, so I was able to guide it to a mostly working prototype in very little time. But doing it myself from zero would've taken at least a couple of hours.But truthfully 90% of work related programming is not problem solving, it's implementing business logic. And dealing with poor, ever changing customer specs. Which an llm will not help with.
TeMPOraL|11 months ago
Au contraire, these are exactly things LLMs are super helpful at - most of business logic in any company is just doing the same thing every other company is doing; there's not that many unique challenges in day-to-day programming (or business in general). And then, more than half of the work of "implementing business logic" is feeding data in and out, presenting it to the user, and a bunch of other things that boil down to gluing together preexisting components and frameworks - again, a kind of work that LLMs are quite a big time-saver for, if you use them right.