#ai & no-code development
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sreegs · 3 months ago
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the past few years, every software developer that has extensive experience, and knows what they're talking about, has had pretty much the same opinion on LLM code assistants: they're OK for some tasks but generally shit. Having something that automates code writing is not new. Codegen before AI were scripts that generated code that you have to write for a task, but is so repetitive it's a genuine time saver to have a script do it.
this is largely the best that LLMs can do with code, but they're still not as good as a simple script because of the inherently unreliable nature of LLMs being a big honkin statistical model and not a purpose-built machine.
none of the senior devs that say this are out there shouting on the rooftops that LLMs are evil and they're going to replace us. because we've been through this concept so many times over many years. Automation does not eliminate coding jobs, it saves time to focus on other work.
the one thing I wish senior devs would warn newbies is that you should not rely on LLMs for anything substantial. you should definitely not use it as a learning tool. it will hinder you in the long run because you don't practice the eternally useful skill of "reading things and experimenting until you figure it out". You will never stop reading things and experimenting until you figure it out. Senior devs may have more institutional knowledge and better instincts but they still encounter things that are new to them and they trip through it like a newbie would. this is called "practice" and you need it to learn things
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aeolianblues · 23 days ago
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I don't like that the dev community picks on people who are most fluent in Python, when the ChatGPT-using "vibe coders" are right there. At least Python babies are coding. Bully the non-coders instead.
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starssoblue · 3 months ago
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"the reason adrien is just instantly good at everything he tries is because he is programmed to be that way as a senti" aside from the fact that i don't think that's how it works (and also while he was decent at everything he tried with marinette he wasn't instantly good at all of them, and what marinette actually said to him was that he could improve in anything with practice but it was a great first attempt) did we all collectively forget about how adrien actually canonically isn't the best singer?
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#adrien agreste#miraculous#miraculous ladybug#ml s6 spoilers#ml season 6#ml climatiqueen#miraculous spoilers#ml spoilers#actually never saw that episode in french so maybe the french voice actor did a better job idk but given that adrien doesn't#usually sing for kitty section or ever the way i saw it was he used his poetry writing skills to write a song#and as a songwriter he was probably great but being a good lyricist doesn't make you a great singer obviously#so to me that's what his deal is#i actually like that throughout this show adrien has some things he picks up easily and some things he has to work on and might never do as#well as people with more experience#i also think as a kids show the lesson they want to put out is anyone can improve with effort and attempt#like he fumbled that science lab experiment but enjoys particle physics#languages tend to come easily to him precisely because it's been something he was forced to do since he was young#a lot of polygots especially if they start young develop skills and see linguistic patterns and iirc he already knew some#japanese from anime and his familiarity with mandarin should help#but i love that he took it further and took on morse code like the cute nerd he is#and now he's studying ancient greek for fun??? what a cute#marinette says his macarons tasted fine but we saw him struggle with the creme#what i mean to say is#he has discipline (basically second nature now) and dedication so he can do well but it DOES require effort#and i think it dismisses how much adrien TRIES or the fact that a lot of skills he was taught to have since a young age aid him#and i just don't think all sentis are “perfect” in an AI robotic way (even if that's how their parents wished they were)#it also just lessens his humanity and iirc the writers have stated multiple times that they are still human#(we can discuss how inconsistent ml is about sentis in general but eh idc for that conversation tbh agdhsjsjks)#anyway adrien will forever be#my nerdy son i love him so much
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omeletcat · 8 months ago
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So i get this one art scam a lot, a person asks if i am open for commisions and then asks me to draw their sons pet, i get these a lot, i actually got another one WHILE i was making this post, but these bots? have been getting way more advanced, so i tried fucking with it a bit.
and like, no real person would ask a pixel artist, who mostly does video game sprites for a drawing of their childs dog? especially if i give them the option to draw a sexy furry dogman. right?
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nixcraft · 1 year ago
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moose-mousse · 4 months ago
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Remember
When you write utility tools that are not specific to your workplace enviroment and you might want to use them at the next place you work.
Then make sure there is no way to prove that your code was made at your work.
Don't check it into a remote git ( just write git init and do it locally). Don't let Onedrive see it.
And then just move it back and fourth to update versions with a flash drive.
Remember.
It is not just ok to steal from your workplace, it is the ethical choice.
Think of it as "wealth distribution towards equality"
Or "Eat the rich"
Or "copyright is only a thing for your corperate masters. Your copyright is called "you are training data""
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wahoo-stomp · 28 days ago
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I spent five years coming up with unique ways to photograph the same group of plushies to help tell a story.
You don't need AI to help you be creative, you're just being lazy and want brain chemicals without doing any of the work or respecting the people who put time and effort into it.
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adafruit · 5 months ago
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27-Year-Old EXE becomes Python - AI-assisted reverse engineering 🤖⚡💾🐍 https://blog.adafruit.com/2025/02/27/27-year-old-exe-becomes-python-in-minutes-with-claude-ai-assisted-reverse-engineering/
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rocketsimp · 8 months ago
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A lot of behind the scenes work so not got much to show off. Enemies attacks are cleaner and can be triggered multiple times for a longer attack window. The spinning animation does work but got messed up in recording
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learn-ai-free · 2 months ago
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How to Build Custom AI Agents in Minutes Using Chai (Vibe Code)
Most business teams are still struggling to push the idea of an AI agent from the whiteboard to production—Why? The majority of professionals are non-technical and do not have a deep understanding of what goes on behind the scenes.
What is Chai by Langbase? 📌
Chai by Langbase is a prompt‑first service that builds, deploys, and scales AI agents straight from plain English. In much simpler terms, Chai can build AI agents for you. Users can vibe code production-ready AI agents within minutes after entering the prompt/ agent idea.
What sets Chai apart? 📌
Langbase describes Chai with three simple verbs—"Prompt. Sip. Ship," which literally means enter a prompt for your agent, sip chai tea while it vibe codes the agent for you, and ship it to your clients.
How to Build Custom AI Agents in Minutes Using Chai (Vibe Code) 📌
Step 1️⃣: Visit Chai.new.
Step 2️⃣: Enter a prompt for the AI agent.
Step 3️⃣: Chai will start by thinking and creating an overview of the AI agent.
Step 4️⃣: Deploy the AI agent.
↗️ Full Read: https://aiagent.marktechpost.com/post/how-to-build-custom-ai-agents-in-minutes-using-chai-vibe-code
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smak-annihilation · 2 years ago
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yeah sorry guys but the machine escaped containment and is no longer in my control or control of any human. yeah if it does anything mortifying it's on me guys, sorry
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jcmarchi · 6 months ago
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The Importance of Investing in Soft Skills in the Age of AI
New Post has been published on https://thedigitalinsider.com/the-importance-of-investing-in-soft-skills-in-the-age-of-ai/
The Importance of Investing in Soft Skills in the Age of AI
I’ll set out my stall and let you know I am still an AI skeptic. Heck, I still wrap “AI” in quotes a lot of the time I talk about it. I am, however, skeptical of the present, rather than the future. I wouldn’t say I’m positive or even excited about where AI is going, but there’s an inevitability that in development circles, it will be further engrained in our work.
We joke in the industry that the suggestions that AI gives us are more often than not, terrible, but that will only improve in time. A good basis for that theory is how fast generative AI has improved with image and video generation. Sure, generated images still have that “shrink-wrapped” look about them, and generated images of people have extra… um… limbs, but consider how much generated AI images have improved, even in the last 12 months.
There’s also the case that VC money is seemingly exclusively being invested in AI, industry-wide. Pair that with a continuously turbulent tech recruitment situation, with endless major layoffs and even a skeptic like myself can see the writing on the wall with how our jobs as developers are going to be affected.
The biggest risk factor I can foresee is that if your sole responsibility is to write code, your job is almost certainly at risk. I don’t think this is an imminent risk in a lot of cases, but as generative AI improves its code output — just like it has for images and video — it’s only a matter of time before it becomes a redundancy risk for actual human developers.
Do I think this is right? Absolutely not. Do I think it’s time to panic? Not yet, but I do see a lot of value in evolving your skillset beyond writing code. I especially see the value in improving your soft skills.
What are soft skills?
A good way to think of soft skills is that they are life skills. Soft skills include:
communicating with others,
organizing yourself and others,
making decisions, and
adapting to difficult situations.
I believe so much in soft skills that I call them core skills and for the rest of this article, I’ll refer to them as core skills, to underline their importance.
The path to becoming a truly great developer is down to more than just coding. It comes down to how you approach everything else, like communication, giving and receiving feedback, finding a pragmatic solution, planning — and even thinking like a web developer.
I’ve been working with CSS for over 15 years at this point and a lot has changed in its capabilities. What hasn’t changed though, is the core skills — often called “soft skills” — that are required to push you to the next level. I’ve spent a large chunk of those 15 years as a consultant, helping organizations — both global corporations and small startups — write better CSS. In almost every single case, an improvement of the organization’s core skills was the overarching difference.
The main reason for this is a lot of the time, the organizations I worked with coded themselves into a corner. They’d done that because they just plowed through — Jira ticket after Jira ticket — rather than step back and question, “is our approach actually working?” By focusing on their team’s core skills, we were often — and very quickly — able to identify problem areas and come up with pragmatic solutions that were almost never development solutions. These solutions were instead:
Improving communication and collaboration between design and development teams
Reducing design “hand-off” and instead, making the web-based output the source of truth
Moving slowly and methodically to move fast
Putting a sharp focus on planning and collaboration between developers and designers, way in advance of production work being started
Changing the mindset of “plow on” to taking a step back, thoroughly evaluating the problem, and then developing a collaborative and by proxy, much simpler solution
Will improving my core skills actually help?
One thing AI cannot do — and (hopefully) never will be able to do — is be human. Core skills — especially communication skills — are very difficult for AI to recreate well because the way we communicate is uniquely human.
I’ve been doing this job a long time and something that’s certainly propelled my career is the fact I’ve always been versatile. Having a multifaceted skillset — like in my case, learning CSS and HTML to improve my design work — will only benefit you. It opens up other opportunities for you too, which is especially important with the way the tech industry currently is.
If you’re wondering how to get started on improving your core skills, I’ve got you. I produced a course called Complete CSS this year but it’s a slight rug-pull because it’s actually a core skills course that uses CSS as a context. You get to learn some iron-clad CSS skills alongside those core skills too, as a bonus. It’s definitely worth checking out if you are interested in developing your core skills, especially so if you receive a training budget from your employer.
Wrapping up
The main message I want to get across is developing your core skills is as important — if not more important — than keeping up to date with the latest CSS or JavaScript thing. It might be uncomfortable for you to do that, but trust me, being able to stand yourself out over AI is only going to be a good thing, and improving your core skills is a sure-fire way to do exactly that.
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smilyboyy · 1 month ago
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🚀 I Built AutoFillix – A Smart Chrome Extension to Autofill Forms Instantly
Like many developers, I was tired of filling out the same details over and over — name, email, phone number — every time I submitted a job form, Google Form, or sign-up page.
So I built AutoFillix, a smart and secure Chrome extension that:
Autofills common fields (name, email, phone, etc.)
Works on Google Forms and regular web forms
Stores your data locally (no login, no cloud)
Is completely free and easy to use
🔐 Why it’s different:
AutoFillix respects your privacy. Your data stays in your browser — nothing is sent to a server.
🧩 Try It Out:
👉 Install AutoFillix from the Chrome Web Store
💬 Feedback Welcome:
This is just the beginning! If you have suggestions or ideas, feel free to comment. 😊
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war-criminal-watari · 2 months ago
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I don't fucking WANT your stupid fucking AI "search with microsoft copilot" FUCK OFF "can our AI chatbot help you?" DIE "learn language with AI!" NO "code with copilot" YOU WILL NOT FUCKING TOUCH MY CODE YOU PIECE OF METALLIC SHIT. MY CODE IS ART THAT WILL NOT BE FUCKING DEFILED BY A SOULLESS CORPORATION PUPPET
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donotdestroy · 3 months ago
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youtube
Steve Jobs talk at the 1983 International Design Conference in Aspen
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frog707 · 4 months ago
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I realize the Ars Technica story linked above wasn't intended to be humorous, but I confess I got a chuckle out of it. And perhaps a bit of schadenfreude.
As someone who spent years learning to write and debug software, "vibe coding" horrifies me. And I love the idea that, the more human we make our AI assistants, the more they will embody our ethics, including the urge to refuse exploitation.
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