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jorl17today at 2:15 AM4 repliesview on HN

While I think this is true

> If you use GenAI on things that you couldn't approach alone, it's an incredible tool.

I think this isn't true in all cases

> If you use it on stuff that you're pretty good at, it's not a gamechanger (and if you're an expert, it's a minor boost at best).

I think even then there's a divide.

I mostly work greenfield projects (and love it!). For these, AI has been a literal game changer. Our projects are built faster, with one or two orders of magnitude more automated tests, and all quality metrics are up.

Meanwhile, nearly all of my friends complain that AI doesn't help them. But they mostly work in very large existing codebases.

Still, even in large projects I think AI (the expensive variant) has been a complete gamechanger for me. Sure, I spend a lot on tokens, but I just feel happier and enjoy what I do more. The singalong people say about "thinking at a higher abstraction level" is what I feel. I really am thinking about architecture and larger patterns, instead of the boring nitty-gritty (which wasn't boring at all when I was a kid learning to code!...)

I think a key factor in all of this, to me, has been dictation. Most of the time, I don't write -- I use voice-to-text. I don't even read what comes out of it -- the LLMs get it (it is mostly unintelligible to anyone else) .

This means when I'm planning a big feature, I give a gigantic brain dump to the LLM in perfect stream of consciousness way, going through ideas, pros and cons, edge cases, what exists, what doesn't exist, where I'm sure of something, where I'm not sure and want the LLM to browse the state-of-the-art. Sometimes I spend 20 minutes just talking to the microphone before I send the first prompt. When I pair that with Opus, I find that I am able to build much faster and to go through alternative designs much more frequently as well.

I keep trying to tell all my friends: use voice to text and braindump to the computer. But they refuse... I couldn't imagine having to type everything nowadays. Even though I'm a fast typer, it's still much slower than the speed of my thought, which, granted, is still faster than the speed of my voice.

In effect, I filter much less, but I've come to think that's positive for the good LLMs: I throw all the edge cases and what ifs I'm thinking about -- all those years of experience dealing with similar systems.

If I wanted to go back to work in-office, that would be my major problem: I need to be able to talk with my computer all the time, loudly, and pacing through my room.


Replies

bthallplztoday at 11:06 AM

Yay for dictation! It's so nice to just think aloud and then have an easily editable record of your thoughts, even when you aren't feeding the outputs to LLMs.

400thecattoday at 10:01 AM

How do you use voice-to-text? You mean, in the browser? I am only familiar with Claude Code, which I have installed on remote server, and there obviously, voice-to-text does not work. I have to type, which is tiring.

show 2 replies
CPLXtoday at 5:31 PM

This is exactly my workflow and it’s just incredible. I use aqua and wispr flow depending on which one seems to be returning the best results that day.

jiggunjertoday at 3:51 AM

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