I think people are just getting lost in the sauce. Forget all the "singularity" or "AGI" nonsense. LLMs are genuinely useful automation machines. They're fantastic for going from semi-structured data to structured data. They're great for going from text blob to decision points. They're great for going from vague instructions to step-by-step inference.
No one (at least no serious person) is saying ChatGPT is Immanuel Kant or Ernest Hemingway. The fact that we still have sherpas doesn't make trains any less useful or interesting.
I think this post is specifically an answer to yet another "AGI is just around the corner" post that made waves recently.
Fundamentally, I think that many problems in white-collar life are text comprehension problems or basic automation problems. Further, they often don't even need to be done particularly well. For example, we've long decided that it's OK for customer support to suck, and LLMs are now an upgrade over an overseas call center worker who must follow a rigid script.
So yeah, LLMs can be quite useful and will be used more and more. But this is also not the discourse we're having on HN. Every day, there's some AGI marketing headline, including one at #1 right now from OpenAI.
I think what's surprising people is how a rough, first-order approximate solution (produced with little cognitive effort) is good enough for 90% of everyday tasks
If I showed you a new species of animal that does exactly what an LLM does, what would you say? Let’s say a bird, you ask it a question , and it returns an expert level human response. What if these new birds were everywhere?
The long tail is fatter and longer than many people expect.
AlphaZero was a special/unusual case, I would say an outlier.
FSD is still not ready, but people have seen it working for ten years, slowly climbing up the asymptote, but still not reaching human level driving, and it may take a while.
I use AI models for coding every day, I am not a luddite, but I don't feel the AGI, not at all, what I am seeing is a nice tool that is seriously over-hyped.
The article feels, I don't know… maybe like someone calmly sitting in a rocking chair staring at the sea. Then the camera turns, and there's an erupting volcano in the background.
> If it was a life or death decision, would you trust the model? Judgement, yes, but decision? No, they are not capable of making a decision, at least important ones.
A self-driving car with a vision-language-action model inside buzzes by.
> It still fails when it comes to spatial relations within text, because everything is understood in terms of relations and correspondences between tokens as values themselves, and apparent spatial position is not a stored value.
A large multimodal model listens to your request and produces a picture.
> They'll always need someone to take a look under the hood, figure out how their machine ticks. A strong, fearless individual, the spanner in the works, the eddy in the stream!
This has been popping up quite a bit but as far as I can tell, neither the original thought piece nor (therefore) the critiques are particularly above-the-bar?
The original [0] that this is in response to, essentially posits that something you cannot afford to ignore is going on, especially if you work in a white collar job. Admittedly a little bit of FUD [1] is going on with the "AI is coming for your job" narrative, but the core idea, that this is a fast moving field where it's worth re-examining your assumptions from time to time, appears to be sound and hard to disagree with.
This article has a confrontational title, but the point made here seems to not be incompatible with the original...the author is confronting the FUD directly, which is understandable but perhaps not quite as useful as refuting the core thesis, which is that something you cannot afford to ignore is happening.
In fact, both these people seem to be in agreement that you need to keep an eye on this ball, they just have a "panic" versus "don't panic" framing. Should you panic in an emergency? Research says no [2].
The original seems to be arguing, among other things, that the singularity has begun because AI has been employed to improve AI development tooling. I can see it both ways, but skepticism on these claims is natural and warranted. I agree with you that there's no shortage of people underestimating the importance of this moment in history.
dvt|16 days ago
No one (at least no serious person) is saying ChatGPT is Immanuel Kant or Ernest Hemingway. The fact that we still have sherpas doesn't make trains any less useful or interesting.
lich_king|16 days ago
Fundamentally, I think that many problems in white-collar life are text comprehension problems or basic automation problems. Further, they often don't even need to be done particularly well. For example, we've long decided that it's OK for customer support to suck, and LLMs are now an upgrade over an overseas call center worker who must follow a rigid script.
So yeah, LLMs can be quite useful and will be used more and more. But this is also not the discourse we're having on HN. Every day, there's some AGI marketing headline, including one at #1 right now from OpenAI.
alansaber|16 days ago
general_reveal|16 days ago
That’s very big.
AshamedCaptain|16 days ago
stephc_int13|16 days ago
AlphaZero was a special/unusual case, I would say an outlier.
FSD is still not ready, but people have seen it working for ten years, slowly climbing up the asymptote, but still not reaching human level driving, and it may take a while.
I use AI models for coding every day, I am not a luddite, but I don't feel the AGI, not at all, what I am seeing is a nice tool that is seriously over-hyped.
red75prime|16 days ago
> If it was a life or death decision, would you trust the model? Judgement, yes, but decision? No, they are not capable of making a decision, at least important ones.
A self-driving car with a vision-language-action model inside buzzes by.
> It still fails when it comes to spatial relations within text, because everything is understood in terms of relations and correspondences between tokens as values themselves, and apparent spatial position is not a stored value.
A large multimodal model listens to your request and produces a picture.
> They'll always need someone to take a look under the hood, figure out how their machine ticks. A strong, fearless individual, the spanner in the works, the eddy in the stream!
GPT‑5.3‑Codex helps debug its own training.
irishcoffee|16 days ago
Vision-action maybe. Jamming language in the middle there is an indicator you should run for public office.
nickorlow|16 days ago
Doesn't this support the author's point? It still required humans.
dang|16 days ago
Something Big Is Coming (Annotated by Ed Zitron) [pdf] - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47007991 - Feb 2026 (31 comments)
Something Big Is Happening - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46973011 - Feb 2026 (74 comments)
rolph|16 days ago
bdangubic|16 days ago
argee|16 days ago
This article has a confrontational title, but the point made here seems to not be incompatible with the original...the author is confronting the FUD directly, which is understandable but perhaps not quite as useful as refuting the core thesis, which is that something you cannot afford to ignore is happening.
In fact, both these people seem to be in agreement that you need to keep an eye on this ball, they just have a "panic" versus "don't panic" framing. Should you panic in an emergency? Research says no [2].
[0] https://shumer.dev/something-big-is-happening
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fear,_uncertainty,_and_doubt - note the original author is an AI founder
[2] https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC9180869/
AreShoesFeet000|16 days ago
hackyhacky|16 days ago
rfonseca|16 days ago
twism|16 days ago
layer8|16 days ago
disillusioned|15 days ago
xeckr|16 days ago
mellosouls|16 days ago
Something big is happening (97 points, 77 comments)
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46973011
irdc|16 days ago
mchusma|16 days ago
But I have personally repeatedly used AI instead of humans across domains.
AI displacement isn’t a prediction. It’s here.
DangitBobby|16 days ago