• @barsquid@lemmy.world
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    238 months ago

    The last time I saw someone talk about using the right LLM tool for the job, they were describing turning two minutes of writing a simple map/reduce into one minute of reading enough to confirm the generated one worked. I think I’ll pass on that.

    • @linearchaos@lemmy.world
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      198 months ago

      confirm the generated one worked. I think I’ll pass on tha

      LLM wasn’t the right tool for the job, so search engine companies made their search engines suck so bad that it was an acceptable replacement.

      • @NuXCOM_90Percent@lemmy.zip
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        138 months ago

        Honestly? I think search engines are actually the best use for LLMs. We just need them to be “explainable” and actually cite things.

        Even going back to the AOL days, Ask Jeeves was awesome and a lot of us STILL write our google queries in question form when we aren’t looking for a specific factoid. And LLMs are awesome for parsing those semi-rambling queries like “I am thinking of a book. It was maybe in the early 00s? It was about a former fighter pilot turned ship captain leading the first FTL expedition and he found aliens and it ended with him and humanity fighting off an alien invasion on Earth” and can build on queries to drill down until you have the answer (Evan Currie’s Odyssey One, by the way).

        Combine that with citations of what page(s) the information was pulled from and you have a PERFECT search engine.

        • @notabot@lemm.ee
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          128 months ago

          That may be your perfect search engine, I jyst want proper boolean operators on a sesrch engine that doesn’t think it knows what I want better than I do, and doesn’t pack the results out with pages that don’t match all the criteria just for the sake of it. The sort of thing you described would be anathema to me, as I suspect my preferred option may be to you.

        • @linearchaos@lemmy.world
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          18 months ago

          They are VERY VERY good at search engine work with a few caveats that we’ll eventually nail. The problem is, they’re WAY to expensive for that purpose. Single queries take tons of compute and power. Constant training on new data takes boatloads of power.

          They’re the opposite of efficient; eventually, they’ll have to start charging you a subscription to search with them to stay in business.

        • @Grandwolf319@sh.itjust.works
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          18 months ago

          So my company said they might use it to improve confluence search, I was like fuck yeah! Finally a good use.

          But to be fair, that’s mostly because confluence search sucks to begin with.

    • @Grandwolf319@sh.itjust.works
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      58 months ago

      Yeah, every time someone says how useful they find LLM for code I just assume they are doing the most basic shit (so far it’s been true).

    • @JDubbleu@programming.dev
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      18 months ago

      That’s a 50% time reduction for the same output which sounds great to me.

      I’d much rather let an LLM do the menial shit with my validation while I focus on larger problems such as system and API design, or creating rollback plans for major upgrades instead of expending mental energy writing something that has been written a thousand times. They’re not gonna rewrite your entire codebase, but they’re incredibly useful for the small stuff.

      I’m not even particularly into LLMs, and they’re definitely not gonna change the world in the way big tech would like you to believe. However, to deny their usefulness is silly.

      • @barsquid@lemmy.world
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        18 months ago

        It’s not a consistent 50%, it’s 50% off one task that’s so simple it takes two minutes. I’m not doing enough of that where shaving off minutes is helpful. Maybe other people are writing way more boilerplate than I am or something.

        • @JDubbleu@programming.dev
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          18 months ago

          Those little things add up though, and it’s not just good at boilerplate. Also just having a more intelligent context-aware auto complete itself I’ve found to be super valuable.