Just want to clarify, this is not my Substack, I’m just sharing this because I found it insightful.

The author describes himself as a “fractional CTO”(no clue what that means, don’t ask me) and advisor. His clients asked him how they could leverage AI. He decided to experience it for himself. From the author(emphasis mine):

I forced myself to use Claude Code exclusively to build a product. Three months. Not a single line of code written by me. I wanted to experience what my clients were considering—100% AI adoption. I needed to know firsthand why that 95% failure rate exists.

I got the product launched. It worked. I was proud of what I’d created. Then came the moment that validated every concern in that MIT study: I needed to make a small change and realized I wasn’t confident I could do it. My own product, built under my direction, and I’d lost confidence in my ability to modify it.

Now when clients ask me about AI adoption, I can tell them exactly what 100% looks like: it looks like failure. Not immediate failure—that’s the trap. Initial metrics look great. You ship faster. You feel productive. Then three months later, you realize nobody actually understands what you’ve built.

  • Agent641@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    I cannot understand and debug code written by AI. But I also cannot understand and debug code written by me.

    Let’s just call it even.

    • I Cast Fist@programming.dev
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      1 month ago

      At least you can blame yourself for your own shitty code, which hopefully will never attempt to “accidentally” erase the entire project

  • Suffa@lemmy.wtf
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    1 month ago

    AI is really great for small apps. I’ve saved so many hours over weekends that would otherwise be spent coding a small thing I need a few times whereas now I can get an AI to spit it out for me.

    But anything big and it’s fucking stupid, it cannot track large projects at all.

      • 6nk06@sh.itjust.works
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        1 month ago

        I’m curious about that too since you can “create” most small applications with a few lines of Bash, pipes, and all the available tools on Linux.

      • utopiah@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        FWIW that’s a good question but IMHO the better question is :

        What kind of small things have you vibed out that you needed that didn’t actually exist or at least you couldn’t find after a 5min search on open source forges like CodeBerg, Gitblab, Github, etc?

        Because making something quick that kind of works is nice… but why even do so in the first place if it’s already out there, maybe maintained but at least tested?

        • Victor@lemmy.world
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          1 month ago

          Since you put such emphasis on “better”: I’d still like to have an answer to the one I posed.

          Yours would be a reasonable follow-up question if we noticed that their vibed projects are utilities already available in the ecosystem. 👍

        • jj4211@lemmy.world
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          1 month ago

          So if it can be vibe coded, it’s pretty much certainly already a “thing”, but with some awkwardness.

          Maybe what you need is a combination of two utilities, maybe the interface is very awkward for your use case, maybe you have to make a tiny compromise because it doesn’t quite match.

          Maybe you want a little utility to do stuff with media. Now you could navigate your way through ffmpeg and mkvextract, which together handles what you want, with some scripting to keep you from having to remember the specific way to do things in the myriad of stuff those utilities do. An LLM could probably knock that script out for you quickly without having to delve too deeply into the documentation for the projects.

      • Random Dent@lemmy.ml
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        1 month ago

        Not OP but I made a little menu thing for launching VMs and a script for grabbing trailers for downloaded movies that reads the name of the folder, finds the trailer and uses yt-dlp to grab it, puts it in the folder and renames it.