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tomjakubowski | 12 days ago

It's funny, it sure seems like software projects in general follow the Lindy effect: considering their age and mindshare, I can safely predict gcc, emacs, SQLite, and Python will still be running somewhere ten, 20, 30 years from now. Indeed, people will choose to use certain software specifically because it's been around forever; it's tried and true.

But LLMs, and AI-related tooling, seem to really buck that trend: they're obsoleted almost as soon as they're released.

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alansaber|11 days ago

AI-related tooling is pretty fungible, but AI models get immediately obseleted due to the unit economics around training models... as well as the fact that nobody releases their datasets or training paradigms in useful detail (best we get is the model weights, because of copyright etc etc)

skybrian|11 days ago

We saw that for PC's in the 80's because performance was advancing rapidly. It slowed down somewhat as computers became good enough.