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  3. My experience with generative-AI has been that, at its very best, it is subtly wrong in ways that only an expert in the relevant subject would recognise.

My experience with generative-AI has been that, at its very best, it is subtly wrong in ways that only an expert in the relevant subject would recognise.

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  • jonathanhogg@mastodon.socialJ jonathanhogg@mastodon.social

    You know what? HyperCard was a glorious moment in time that I dearly miss: an army of non-experts were bashing together and sharing weird and wonderful stacks that were part 'zine, part adventure game and part database. Instead of laughing at vibe-coders, maybe we should ask ourselves why the current state-of-the-art in beginner-friendly programming tools is a planet-boiling roulette wheel.

    badrihippo@fosstodon.orgB This user is from outside of this forum
    badrihippo@fosstodon.orgB This user is from outside of this forum
    badrihippo@fosstodon.org
    schrieb zuletzt editiert von
    #124

    @jonathanhogg repeating because this is an awesome sentence with an awesome description at the end:

    > Instead of laughing at vibe-coders, maybe we should ask ourselves why the current state-of-the-art in beginner-friendly programming tools is a planet-boiling roulette wheel.

    heiglandreas@phpc.socialH 1 Antwort Letzte Antwort
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    • jonathanhogg@mastodon.socialJ jonathanhogg@mastodon.social

      @darrenmoffat Holy shit! Darren?

      jamesthomson@mastodon.socialJ This user is from outside of this forum
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      jamesthomson@mastodon.social
      schrieb zuletzt editiert von
      #125

      @jonathanhogg @darrenmoffat Hey you two!

      jonathanhogg@mastodon.socialJ 1 Antwort Letzte Antwort
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      • jonathanhogg@mastodon.socialJ jonathanhogg@mastodon.social

        We seem to have largely stopped innovating on trying to lower barriers to programming in favour of creating endless new frameworks and libraries for a vanishingly small number of near-identical languages. It is the mid-2020s and people are wringing their hands over Rust as if it was some inexplicable new thing rather than a C-derivative that incorporates decades old type theory. You know what I consider to be genuinely ground-breaking programming tools? VisiCalc, HyperCard and Scratch.

        badrihippo@fosstodon.orgB This user is from outside of this forum
        badrihippo@fosstodon.orgB This user is from outside of this forum
        badrihippo@fosstodon.org
        schrieb zuletzt editiert von
        #126

        @jonathanhogg I'm not familiar with the other two but Scratch is how I learnt programming so that brought back memories!

        The main reason I switched to Python was that my computer time was limited and Python text was easier to jot down into my (paper) notebook than sitting around drawing Scratch blocks. Although I did a fair amount of that too 🤪

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        • jamesthomson@mastodon.socialJ jamesthomson@mastodon.social

          @jonathanhogg @darrenmoffat Hey you two!

          jonathanhogg@mastodon.socialJ This user is from outside of this forum
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          jonathanhogg@mastodon.social
          schrieb zuletzt editiert von
          #127

          @jamesthomson @darrenmoffat Dapper new profile pic, James! 😀

          jamesthomson@mastodon.socialJ 1 Antwort Letzte Antwort
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          • rojun@mementomori.socialR rojun@mementomori.social

            @jonathanhogg Scratch is excellent. My kid's been using it. I used hypercard at his age and it was a lot fun.

            Had it not been because our teacher had acquired two macs into the class, and we could spend time before and after school, I don't think it would have been as fun. It's not just the tools, but also the environment and culture.

            gunchleoc@mastodon.scotG This user is from outside of this forum
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            gunchleoc@mastodon.scot
            schrieb zuletzt editiert von
            #128

            @rojun @jonathanhogg Playing with Scratch is definitely fun, even if you're an adult with programming experience already.

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            • badrihippo@fosstodon.orgB badrihippo@fosstodon.org

              @jonathanhogg repeating because this is an awesome sentence with an awesome description at the end:

              > Instead of laughing at vibe-coders, maybe we should ask ourselves why the current state-of-the-art in beginner-friendly programming tools is a planet-boiling roulette wheel.

              heiglandreas@phpc.socialH This user is from outside of this forum
              heiglandreas@phpc.socialH This user is from outside of this forum
              heiglandreas@phpc.social
              schrieb zuletzt editiert von
              #129

              @badrihippo @jonathanhogg

              AI is not lowering the barrier-to-entry for programming. It is gatekeeping from seeing, acknowledging and stepping over the barrier.

              1 Antwort Letzte Antwort
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              • jonathanhogg@mastodon.socialJ jonathanhogg@mastodon.social

                @jamesthomson @darrenmoffat Dapper new profile pic, James! 😀

                jamesthomson@mastodon.socialJ This user is from outside of this forum
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                jamesthomson@mastodon.social
                schrieb zuletzt editiert von
                #130

                @jonathanhogg @darrenmoffat Thought I’d join the monochrome mafia. Who else do we know on here from DCS days?

                1 Antwort Letzte Antwort
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                • warmsignull@mastodon.socialW warmsignull@mastodon.social

                  @jonathanhogg Consider this scenario: spend a very long time planning and designing, and then have a very fast code output, then fix any issues.

                  Also what about projects which can't be made in 30k lines? Doesn't automatically mean that the project is wrong just because it is big.

                  schmudde@mastodon.socialS This user is from outside of this forum
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                  schmudde@mastodon.social
                  schrieb zuletzt editiert von
                  #131

                  @warmsignull Unfortunately it seems that Fred Brooks' work is not common knowledge. He concludes that the number of bugs in a program is not linear with the length of a program but a *power function*.

                  So yes - brevity is a goal. And there have been studies that show that verbose languages produce more bugs. So it is in our best interest as systems engineers to research how to improve programming.

                  e.g. what is expressed in 30k of Java is not the same as 30k in Lisp.

                  (cc: @jonathanhogg)

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                  • jonathanhogg@mastodon.socialJ jonathanhogg@mastodon.social

                    You know what? HyperCard was a glorious moment in time that I dearly miss: an army of non-experts were bashing together and sharing weird and wonderful stacks that were part 'zine, part adventure game and part database. Instead of laughing at vibe-coders, maybe we should ask ourselves why the current state-of-the-art in beginner-friendly programming tools is a planet-boiling roulette wheel.

                    alexshendi@rollenspiel.socialA This user is from outside of this forum
                    alexshendi@rollenspiel.socialA This user is from outside of this forum
                    alexshendi@rollenspiel.social
                    schrieb zuletzt editiert von
                    #132

                    @jonathanhogg

                    Check out Decker:

                    https://github.com/JohnEarnest/Decker
                    http://beyondloom.com/decker/

                    Try it online:
                    http://beyondloom.com/decker/tour.html

                    #HyperCard #JohnEarnest #Decker

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                    • wavesculptor@climatejustice.socialW wavesculptor@climatejustice.social

                      @jonathanhogg

                      " That people are trying to steer a tank with a speak'n'spell is because we have not made decent bikes." -- if we look at the real-world situation of your metaphor, we see that when "decent bikes" ARE finally here, the establishment begins to gatekeep and legislate against them /because/ they are too effective, at overturning the status quo - ostensibly on the grounds that they are "dangerous" when in the wrong hands.

                      Wondering if the analogy feeds back in the other direction too.

                      @dasgrueneblatt

                      wolf480pl@mstdn.ioW This user is from outside of this forum
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                      wolf480pl@mstdn.io
                      schrieb zuletzt editiert von
                      #133

                      @wavesculptor
                      What are these "decent bikes" that were regulated away?

                      (Not saying there weren't any, just that I haven't been keeping track so I likely missed them.)

                      @jonathanhogg @dasgrueneblatt

                      wavesculptor@climatejustice.socialW 1 Antwort Letzte Antwort
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                      • jonathanhogg@mastodon.socialJ jonathanhogg@mastodon.social

                        To me, all these people crowing about having written 10k lines of code in a day are idiots. If you need to write that much code in a day, you are manifestly working at the wrong level of abstraction to solve your problem.

                        wolf480pl@mstdn.ioW This user is from outside of this forum
                        wolf480pl@mstdn.ioW This user is from outside of this forum
                        wolf480pl@mstdn.io
                        schrieb zuletzt editiert von
                        #134

                        @jonathanhogg
                        On one hand, I'm inclined to agree about the barrier to entry issue - boilerplate sucks, and having more people understand programming would be great.

                        But on the other hand, it feels like the amount of software in existence is already unmanagable, and the average quality is relatively low.

                        You say to move a layer up to avoid writing 10k lines, but the current way to do that results in huge dependency trees with 10s of thousands of lines of someone else's code.

                        1/

                        wolf480pl@mstdn.ioW jonathanhogg@mastodon.socialJ 2 Antworten Letzte Antwort
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                        • wolf480pl@mstdn.ioW wolf480pl@mstdn.io

                          @jonathanhogg
                          On one hand, I'm inclined to agree about the barrier to entry issue - boilerplate sucks, and having more people understand programming would be great.

                          But on the other hand, it feels like the amount of software in existence is already unmanagable, and the average quality is relatively low.

                          You say to move a layer up to avoid writing 10k lines, but the current way to do that results in huge dependency trees with 10s of thousands of lines of someone else's code.

                          1/

                          wolf480pl@mstdn.ioW This user is from outside of this forum
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                          wolf480pl@mstdn.io
                          schrieb zuletzt editiert von
                          #135

                          @jonathanhogg
                          All these dependencies have updates which introduce regressions and API breakage. And they also have vulnerabilities.

                          IME, these things can very quickly become unmanagable - you spend more time updating dependencies than writing your own code - unless you're very picky about your dependencies.

                          So is more people writing more software what the society needs?

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                          • wolf480pl@mstdn.ioW wolf480pl@mstdn.io

                            @jonathanhogg
                            On one hand, I'm inclined to agree about the barrier to entry issue - boilerplate sucks, and having more people understand programming would be great.

                            But on the other hand, it feels like the amount of software in existence is already unmanagable, and the average quality is relatively low.

                            You say to move a layer up to avoid writing 10k lines, but the current way to do that results in huge dependency trees with 10s of thousands of lines of someone else's code.

                            1/

                            jonathanhogg@mastodon.socialJ This user is from outside of this forum
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                            jonathanhogg@mastodon.social
                            schrieb zuletzt editiert von
                            #136

                            @wolf480pl it is the current way of moving up a layer that I object to. We should be thinking of new ways of programming and instead are stuck making new frameworks. We imagine adding more cruft will somehow make it better. Eg., Arduino and Processing imagined that you could take a language wildly unsuited to beginners and make it palatable with a library

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                            • jonathanhogg@mastodon.socialJ jonathanhogg@mastodon.social

                              You know what? HyperCard was a glorious moment in time that I dearly miss: an army of non-experts were bashing together and sharing weird and wonderful stacks that were part 'zine, part adventure game and part database. Instead of laughing at vibe-coders, maybe we should ask ourselves why the current state-of-the-art in beginner-friendly programming tools is a planet-boiling roulette wheel.

                              owen@mementomori.socialO This user is from outside of this forum
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                              owen@mementomori.social
                              schrieb zuletzt editiert von
                              #137

                              @jonathanhogg Apart from a brief flirtation with Basic on a ZX Spectrum my first brush with the logic of coding was HyperTalk. I fell deeply in love with the possibilities that seemed to be hidden inside it.

                              It felt like a rabbit hole with new and unexpected surprises every time you fell down another level.

                              And it equipped me to earn a living for a few short years when multimedia was a thing. Lingo in Macromedia Director, anyone?

                              I wager that Lingo wouldn’t have existed without Hypercard.

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                              • wolf480pl@mstdn.ioW wolf480pl@mstdn.io

                                @wavesculptor
                                What are these "decent bikes" that were regulated away?

                                (Not saying there weren't any, just that I haven't been keeping track so I likely missed them.)

                                @jonathanhogg @dasgrueneblatt

                                wavesculptor@climatejustice.socialW This user is from outside of this forum
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                                wavesculptor@climatejustice.social
                                schrieb zuletzt editiert von
                                #138

                                @wolf480pl

                                #eBikes -- [and #micromobility generally] --massive take-up, but this could be orders of magnitude more in countries such as UK if they were encouraged to diversify and not continually pushed-back-at as "dangerous toys".

                                @jonathanhogg @dasgrueneblatt

                                billysmith@social.coopB 1 Antwort Letzte Antwort
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                                • jonathanhogg@mastodon.socialJ jonathanhogg@mastodon.social

                                  @dasgrueneblatt I think you have misunderstood me: I think vibe coding is a horrendous problem, but it is a symptom of an industry failing. That people are trying to steer a tank with a speak'n'spell is because we have not made decent bikes.

                                  8r3n7@mstdn.ca8 This user is from outside of this forum
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                                  schrieb zuletzt editiert von
                                  #139

                                  @jonathanhogg It would be good to contextualize this issue.

                                  Acquiring knowledge and skill, in any field or endeavor, is inevitably difficult. Those who came before, and did the difficult work, could, if they chose, and were extremely generous, make the road less painful, more traversible, if they took the time.

                                  Don’t underestimate the effort and sacrifice involved in considering the needs of students! Pedagogy is hard work! And it is impeded by the curse of knowledge.

                                  Our advanced technological society has a spotty track record, and a degree of ambivalence (trending towards hostility) towards the broad sharing of understanding. We make schools expensive. We mistreat educators. The best want to monopolize and hoard their knowledge, out of fear of competition.

                                  It’s easy to pick on one or two things that could be better. But it’s a universal challenge.

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                                  • jonathanhogg@mastodon.socialJ jonathanhogg@mastodon.social

                                    @dasgrueneblatt I think you have misunderstood me: I think vibe coding is a horrendous problem, but it is a symptom of an industry failing. That people are trying to steer a tank with a speak'n'spell is because we have not made decent bikes.

                                    kevinrns@mstdn.socialK This user is from outside of this forum
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                                    kevinrns@mstdn.social
                                    schrieb zuletzt editiert von
                                    #140

                                    @jonathanhogg @dasgrueneblatt

                                    Great writing. Verb, noun, resistance.

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                                    • lispi314@udongein.xyzL lispi314@udongein.xyz

                                      @kirtai@tech.lgbt @jonathanhogg@mastodon.social A large number of those lines of code are probably boilerplate indicative of abysmal library quality.

                                      If a language's entire ecosystem is built on boilerplate and it's seen as normal, that is not okay.

                                      gnuxie@social.applied-langua.geG This user is from outside of this forum
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                                      schrieb zuletzt editiert von
                                      #141
                                      @lispi314 @jonathanhogg @kirtai I mean we didn't get here unintentionally. It's expensive and self sacrificial to invest a lot of time in infrastructure like programming languages and libraries (wherever you land in the stack) and make it very simple to solve the problems you are solving (and others to solve them too). It's also really hard, because not only is the problem you are solving an engineering problem but now also building the infrastructure to solve the problem. And the limiting factor is exploration not sitting down and hypothesising, researching, and cooking up some crap. Which yes is also part of the process too.
                                      gnuxie@social.applied-langua.geG 1 Antwort Letzte Antwort
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                                      • wavesculptor@climatejustice.socialW wavesculptor@climatejustice.social

                                        @jonathanhogg

                                        " That people are trying to steer a tank with a speak'n'spell is because we have not made decent bikes." -- if we look at the real-world situation of your metaphor, we see that when "decent bikes" ARE finally here, the establishment begins to gatekeep and legislate against them /because/ they are too effective, at overturning the status quo - ostensibly on the grounds that they are "dangerous" when in the wrong hands.

                                        Wondering if the analogy feeds back in the other direction too.

                                        @dasgrueneblatt

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                                        schrieb zuletzt editiert von
                                        #142

                                        @wavesculptor @jonathanhogg @dasgrueneblatt

                                        Your analogy will work both ways when people are as eager to pay their own money for AI coding as they are to buy ebikes.

                                        As it is now, giving away AI is like trying to medicate a cat and your analogy push smells like seething cope.

                                        wavesculptor@climatejustice.socialW 1 Antwort Letzte Antwort
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                                        • gnuxie@social.applied-langua.geG gnuxie@social.applied-langua.ge
                                          @lispi314 @jonathanhogg @kirtai I mean we didn't get here unintentionally. It's expensive and self sacrificial to invest a lot of time in infrastructure like programming languages and libraries (wherever you land in the stack) and make it very simple to solve the problems you are solving (and others to solve them too). It's also really hard, because not only is the problem you are solving an engineering problem but now also building the infrastructure to solve the problem. And the limiting factor is exploration not sitting down and hypothesising, researching, and cooking up some crap. Which yes is also part of the process too.
                                          gnuxie@social.applied-langua.geG This user is from outside of this forum
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                                          gnuxie@social.applied-langua.ge
                                          schrieb zuletzt editiert von
                                          #143
                                          @lispi314 @jonathanhogg @kirtai you have to buy into an ideology of doing things this way. And if you're investing a lot of time in e.g. libraries for a given programming language, we already kind of know that our programming languages kinda suck and better be made irrelevant, so it also feels inefficient even when you do buy into it.
                                          gnuxie@social.applied-langua.geG 1 Antwort Letzte Antwort
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