Either way, anyone who ever played one of the early generations of Sim City games can see clearly how much the approach wins.
Either way, anyone who ever played one of the early generations of Sim City games can see clearly how much the approach wins.


Of course it sounds out of touch. I didn’t say it, or anything like it. Just like the other commenter, you seem to have stopped after the first sentence.
20 years of IT experience from a support perspective does qualify me to put anybody in the programming space on notice. The tools might not be as good as a talented and well trained dev, but they’re already better than a lazy dev. The output I get from Claude Code takes effort to get running. It just takes less of it than the output from my outsourced offshore MSP.


I’ve never been able to program in anything more complex than BASIC and command line batch files, but I’m able to get useful output from Claude.
I’m an IT Infrastructure Manager by trade, and I got there through 20 years of supporting everything from desktop to datacenter including weird use cases like controlling systems in a research lab. On top of that, I’ve gotten under the hood of software in the form of running game servers in my spare time.
What you need to get good programs out of AI boils down to 3 things:
I’ve made tools which automate and improve my entire department’s approach to user data, device data, application inventory, patch management, vulnerability management, and these are changes I started making with a free product three months ago, and two months back I switched to the paid version.
Programming is sort of like conversation in an alien language. For that reason, if you can give precise instructions sometimes you really can pull something new into existence using LLM coding. It’s the same reason that you could say words which have never been said in that specific order before, and have an LLM translate them to Portuguese.
I always used to talk about how everything in a computer was math, and that what interested me more than quantum computing would be a machine which starts performing the same sorts of operations on words or concepts that computers of that day ('90s and '00s when “quantum” was being slapped on everything to mean “fast” or “powerful”) were doing on math. I said that the best indicator when linguistic computing arrives would be that without ever learning to program, I’d start being able to program. I was looking at “Dragon Naturally Speaking” when I had this idea. It was one of the earliest effective speech to text programs. I stopped learning to program immediately and focused exclusively on learning operations from that point forward.
I’ve been testing the code generation abilities of LLMs for about three years. Within the last six months I feel like I’m starting to see evidence that the associations being made internally by LLMs are complex enough to begin considering them the fulfillment of my childhood dream of a “word computer”.
All the shitty stuff about environment and theft of art is all there too, which sucks, but more because our economic model sucks than because LLMs either do or do not suck. If we had a framework for meeting everybody’s basic needs, this software in its current state has the potential to turn everyone with a passion for grammatical and technical precision into a concept based developer practically overnight.


That’s a dang odd thing for a US market segment to initiate on a global scale shortly before the country kicks off war on a new front or two…
Personally I still have a soft spot for Newsboys. Mostly just Shine, and Take Me To Your Leader. Those two still feel good.
Initially I kinda liked Audio Adrenaline, but looking back with what we all know now about the impact of a car based society on the world, I gotta admit, “Chevette” didn’t have an ounce of gospel in it, and was a much worse take on crappy cars that probably leaked toxic trash everywhere they went than Adam Sandler’s “Ode to my Car”.