Something that's been bugging me about the AI rollout, with everyone talking about like non-deterministic adversarial multi-agent workflows. Like how do you teach normies about this? Especially, how do you teach normies about this without a traditional path to understanding the underlying mental models?
And like particularly - one thing I talk to a lot of engineers about is what I call "merge days". Merge days are when you like take on the mental overhead of actually getting code merged and deployed, because maybe you have to confirm that tests are run, and you have all the right tests, and like. That mental load on like 50k lines of code is just bananas.
Part of the point is, as has been spoken about forever - actual value is not measured in lines of code. While I think there will be some who can really super charge things with these new powers, I'm not sure how we'll actually scale this.
Like, most of the superpowers in my life has come from single-threading and deep thought. I don't think AI fundamentally changes this, I suspect for most people, it makes delivering real value harder.
i follow AI adoption pretty closely, and i have never seen such a yawning inside/outside gap.
people in SF are putting multi-agent claudeswarms in charge of their lives, consulting chatbots before every decision, wireheading to a degree only sci-fi writers dared to imagine.
people elsewhere are still trying to get approval to use Copilot in Teams, if they're using AI at all.
it's possible the early adopter bubble i'm in has always been this intense, but there seems to be a cultural takeoff happening in addition to the technical one. not ideal!
Something that's been bugging me about the AI rollout, with everyone talking about like non-deterministic adversarial multi-agent workflows. Like how do you teach normies about this? Especially, how do you teach normies about this without a traditional path to understanding the underlying mental models?
And like particularly - one thing I talk to a lot of engineers about is what I call "merge days". Merge days are when you like take on the mental overhead of actually getting code merged and deployed, because maybe you have to confirm that tests are run, and you have all the right tests, and like. That mental load on like 50k lines of code is just bananas.
Part of the point is, as has been spoken about forever - actual value is not measured in lines of code. While I think there will be some who can really super charge things with these new powers, I'm not sure how we'll actually scale this.
Like, most of the superpowers in my life has come from single-threading and deep thought. I don't think AI fundamentally changes this, I suspect for most people, it makes delivering real value harder.
@kevinroose
i follow AI adoption pretty closely, and i have never seen such a yawning inside/outside gap.
people in SF are putting multi-agent claudeswarms in charge of their lives, consulting chatbots before every decision, wireheading to a degree only sci-fi writers dared to imagine.
people elsewhere are still trying to get approval to use Copilot in Teams, if they're using AI at all.
it's possible the early adopter bubble i'm in has always been this intense, but there seems to be a cultural takeoff happening in addition to the technical one. not ideal!
https://www.nytimes.com/by/kevin-roose https://x.com/kevinroose/status/2015464558115295369
putting multi-agent claudeswarms in charge of their lives, consulting chatbots before every decision,
Sweet Jesus, why? Are they tired of being human? This is like being a "company man" in the 1950s/60s USA, but one thousand times worse.