this post was submitted on 17 Mar 2025
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Well, first, I wouldn't say that existing generative AIs can replace a programmer (or even do that great a job at assisting one, increasing productivity). I do think that there's potentially an unexplored role for creating an LLM-based "grammar checker" for code, which may be a larger win in doing debugging work that would normally require a human.
But, okay, set that aside -- let's say that we imagine that we have an AI in 2025 that can serve as a drop-in replacement for a programmer, can translate plain English instructions into a computer program as well as a programmer could. That still doesn't get us to the technological singularity, because that probably involves also doing a lot of research work. Like, you can find plenty of programmers who can write software...but so far, none of them have made a self-improving AGI. :-)
I agree with you, it was more of a commentary on "what would happen if we had AGI tomorrow".
We've been 3 months away from AGI for a few years now and it's debatable if we'll ever get there with LLM's. Looking into the results of AI tests and benchmarks show that they are heavily gamed (tbf, all benchmarks are gamed.) With AI though, there's so much money involved, it's ridiculous.
Fortunately it looks like reality is slowly coming back. Microsoft's CEO said that something like "AI solutions are not addressing customer problems." Maybe I'm in a bubble but I feel like overall, people are starting to cool on AI and the constant hype cycle.