

Can we start calling this a genocide yet?
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Can we start calling this a genocide yet?


Manufacturing things in the Wild West means you can get away with anything. The safety of the general public becomes a concern only when you’re trying to do business with a country that has regulations in place.


If it’s likely to come into contact with water, could that water then end up in the cup?
If yes, you need to consider the safety implications of the materials you chose. I expect the manufacturer chose safe materials, while your glue might not be safe under high pressure and temperature. What if something really nasty gets in your cup as a result?


Boring standard coding is exactly where you can actually let the LLM write the code. Manual intervention and review is still required, but at least you can speed up the process.


My armpits refuse to talk to me. I’ll take that as a sign that overflow errors are a feature, not bug.


Also depends on your level of expertise. If you have beginner questions, an LLM should give you the correct answer most of the time. If you’re an expert, your questions have no answers. Usually, it’s something like an obscure firmware bug edge case even the manufacturer isn’t aware of. Good luck troubleshooting that without writing your own drivers and libraries.


Hacker News?


Realistically though, asking an LLM what’s wrong with my code is a lot faster than scrolling through 50 posts and reading the ones that talk about something almost relevant.


The patient can’t wear a shoe on that foot, but I guess that’s the least of their worries at that point.
Well there goes the moral high ground. Try being a convincing world police when you’ve got a documented genocide happening in your backyard.