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skydhashyesterday at 6:55 PM1 replyview on HN

> I've used AI to accomplish front end development and reverse engineer proprietary USB hardware dongles in C, then rewriting the C into Rust to get easy desktop GUIs around it. Backend

That is not hard. It’s just tedious and very slow to do manually. The hard part would be about designing a usb dongle and ensuring that the associated software has good UX. The reason you don’t see kernel devs REing devices is not because it’s impossible or that it requires expert knowledge. It’s because it’s like counting sands on the beach.


Replies

megousyesterday at 11:28 PM

Whether something is tedious depends on the person and situation. If you're already an expert, you may find a lot of work that goes into your 4th USB device (especially if it's based on yet another chip and bespoke SDK) quite tedious, since lot of it is based on standard requirements/designs that you can't change.

You may also find re-ing stuff not tedious, due to what may be motivating you.

In any case, any work will have some things you just know how to do, or what to do, but previously (before LLM agents) no easy way to plow through them without pressing a lot of keyboard keys over long period of time.