I can see the point you are making. But at the same time, a lot of the tech I touched is already quite mature, and is probably decently documented.
I totally understand the feeling you are describing of just hearding cats. Without an LLM, this project would have taken 10x as long, with 9/10s of that time being spent reading forum posts and github bug reports and stack overflow questions which I think might solve the problem but which actually don’t.
But at the same time, I’m in a pretty common position in software where I don’t know anything about a mature and well designed tool, but I don’t want to really learn how it works because odds are, I will only use it once - or at least, by the time I use it again, I will have forgotten everything about it. And the LLM was able to do my googling for me and tell me “do this”, which was far faster and more pleasant. So I think this use case is quite reasonable.
I can see the point you are making. But at the same time, a lot of the tech I touched is already quite mature, and is probably decently documented.
I totally understand the feeling you are describing of just hearding cats. Without an LLM, this project would have taken 10x as long, with 9/10s of that time being spent reading forum posts and github bug reports and stack overflow questions which I think might solve the problem but which actually don’t.
But at the same time, I’m in a pretty common position in software where I don’t know anything about a mature and well designed tool, but I don’t want to really learn how it works because odds are, I will only use it once - or at least, by the time I use it again, I will have forgotten everything about it. And the LLM was able to do my googling for me and tell me “do this”, which was far faster and more pleasant. So I think this use case is quite reasonable.