secretlyaddictedtolinux2

joined 3 days ago
33
submitted 17 hours ago* (last edited 17 hours ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

Hi, I am a computer nerd. I also took a computer programming class and got the highest score in the class, but I never followed up with advanced classes. Recently, I've thought of different ideas for software I'd like to try to create. I've heard about vibe coding. I know real programmers make fun of it, but I also have heard so much about it and people using it and paying for it that I have a hard time believing it writes garbage code all the time.

However, whenever I am trying to do things in linux and don't know how and ask an LLM, it gets it wrong like 85% of the time. Sometimes it helps, but a lot of times it's fucking stupid and just leads me down a rabbit hole of shit that won't work. Is all vibe coding actually like that too or does some of it actually work?

For example, I know how to set up a server, ssh in, and get some stuff running. I have an idea for an App and since everyone uses smart phones (unfortunately), I'd probably try to code something for a smart phone. But would it be next to impossible for someone like me to learn? I like nerdy stuff, but I am not experienced at all in coding.

I also am not sure I have the dedication to do hours and hours of code, despite possible autism, unless I were highly fucked up, possibly on huge amounts of caffeine or microdosing something. But like, it doesn't seem impossible.

Is this a rabbit hole worth falling into? Do most Apps just fail all the time? Is making an App nowadays like trying to win a lotto?

It would be cool to hear from real App developers. I am getting laid off, my expenses are low because I barely made anything at my job, I'll be getting unemployment, and I am hoping I can get a job working 20-30 hours a week and pay for my living expenses, which are pretty low.

Is this a stupid idea? I did well in school, but I'm not sure that means anything. Also, when I was in the programming class, the TA seemed much, much smarter at programming and could intuitively solve coding problems much faster due to likely a higher IQ. I'm honestly not sure my IQ is high enough to code. My IQ is probably around 112, but I also sometimes did better than everyone on tests for some reason, maybe because I'm a nerd. I'm not sure I will have the insight to tackle hard coding problems, but I'm not sure if those actually occur in real coding.

[–] [email protected] 8 points 17 hours ago

skullfuck all the assholes who did this

metaphorically, of course, in adherence to all of lemmy's various tos

[–] [email protected] 89 points 17 hours ago* (last edited 17 hours ago) (7 children)

Hey, I have an idea that will help Microsoft:

why not add even more AI that logs everything and then reports it to the government through additional telemetry?

then they could even require the next edition to include a dedicated advertising GPU to take those logs and create tailored ads on the wallpaper as well as occasionally parse the logs and generate summaries for safety purposes!

that will bring the customers back and boost short-term profits too!

[–] [email protected] 0 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

I think the intelligent people of this planet need to use fewer quippy talking points and more force to get these idiots (and the psychopathic elite) to stop reverse-terraforming this planet into a barren hellscape.

 

Climate activists have lit themselves on fire trying to warn people of the looming catastrophe, and people still don't care because they are too scientifically illiterate. We are now in the "denial about ignorance" phase, in which convince ourselves we can somehow still ameliorate scientific illiteracy through bizarre methods like humor, sports, and fashion. We'll lol them into understanding math and science, this article suggests. Well, it's probably not worse than doing nothing, possibly?