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It is far better at that - for experienced developers doing something in area new to them
Often it is a superior replacement: you can get intern-quality work on any topic you want, very specific for your task. That sometimes is better than SO. And so far, on track of getting better and better.
I heard all that, tried it out for myself, and it just doesn't feel all that great to me. Maybe one day it will get better but it's just not all that useful in day to day tasks (which your own description kind of confirms).
That's terrible. I always seen internships essentially as charity work companies engage in to polish their PR, or, at best,extend their recruitment pool. You make it sound like the sale's pitch for Tesla's "full self driving (supervised)". It's awesome. Can take you anywhere. Almost no interventions... which results in you having to be ready to intervene at all times, or die driving into a truck.
Maybe one day it will get better, but I'd rather rely on Stefferi as my canary, than on the words of AI enthusiasts.
I wonder if we aren't observing some sort of split between students, hobbiests, web-devs and the like, and applications requiring genuine rigor. My own experience with AI generated code is largely summed up in this short here.
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I guess it depends on how often you need to do stuff like "now I need to drop into badly written docs of a new setup and get simple program working".
I need it fairly often but I can imagine someone who needs it approximately never.
And I am quite surprised that it is useful even for that.
I am not an AI enthusiast
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