In this year of 2025, in December, I find it untenable for anyone to hold this position unless they have not yet given LLMs a good enough try. They're undeniably useful in software development, particularly on tasks that are amenable to structured software development methodologies. I've fixed countless bugs in a tiny fraction of the time, entirely accelerated by the use of LLM agents. I get the most reliable results simply making LLMs follow the "red test, green test" approach, where the LLM first creates a reproducer from a natural language explanation of the problem, and then cooks up a fix. This works extremely well and reliably in producing high quality results.
skydhash|2 months ago
> They're undeniably useful in software development
> I've fixed countless bugs in a tiny fraction of the time
> I get the most reliable results
> This works extremely well and reliably in producing high quality results.
If there's one common thing in comments that seems to be astroturfing for LLM usage, it's that they use lots of superlative adjectives in just one paragraphs.
AYBABTME|2 months ago
To be honest, it makes no difference in my life if you believe or not what I'm saying. And from my perspective, it's just a bit astounding to read people's takes that are authoritatively claiming that LLMs are not useful for software development. It's like telling me over the phone that restaurant X doesn't have a pasta dish, while I'm sitting at restaurant X eating a pasta dish. It's just weird, but I understand that maybe you haven't gone to the resto in a while, or didn't see the menu item, or maybe you just have something against this restaurant for some weird reason.
gldrk|2 months ago
otabdeveloper4|2 months ago
heliumtera|2 months ago
Go to docs, fast page load. Than blank, wait a full second, page loads again. This does not feel like high quality. You think it does because LLM go brrrrrrrr, never complains, says your smart. The resulting product is frustrating.
otabdeveloper4|2 months ago