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saithound | 19 days ago
We replaced the chess board in the park with an app that compares the Elo score of you and your opponent, and probabilistically declares a winner.
But don't worry, if you were a good chess player before we introduced the app, chances are you will remain a good one with the app. The app just makes things faster and cheaper.
My advice to the players is to quit mourning the loss of the tension, laughter and shared moments that got them into chess in the first place.
saghm|18 days ago
saithound|18 days ago
Yes, the people who write articles like the one in this post understand this. Previously, they could do it and get paid while doing a thing they loved.
Now that process is no longer economically viable: they can get paid, or they can do the thing they loved. They lost something, so they mourn the loss. At least they would, but a bunch of tone-deaf people keep interrupting them to explain why they shouldn't.
abustamam|18 days ago
Sometimes I like playing chess at the park with strangers or friends. Sometimes I like playing chess online with friends in another country.
Sometimes I like to play games online with my siblings. Sometimes I like to invite people over to play video games with me on the couch.
Sometimes I wanna watch a movie in the theater. Sometimes I wanna fire up Netflix and watch that same movie, but on my couch.
Sometimes I wanna vibe code an entire app in a weekend. Sometimes I wanna play code golf to solve a puzzle, where LLM usage defeats the purpose.
None of these are being replaced in my life despite having more "advanced" options. If anything, I get to enjoy things more because I have more options and ways to enjoy them.
bonsai_spool|19 days ago
The chess board is still there, not sure I see how LLM tools compels one to stop writing personal projects without AI assistance.