If you try to make the argument that the LLMs are making you a better developer, I would expect pushback.
I've used LLMs for code generation, and the output has been subpar. Better than a novice, but not what I expect from a junior or higher. It is fast, but correctness and sanity is all over the shop.
My problem with lots of these posts is that they are from lazy developers, who are skipping the due diligence of actually validating that the code generated is correct.
If you want to post about how you use the tools, including your processes for ensuring correctness, I would have no objections.
It's a bit sad that sql injection is still a thing. It's been a known problem for decades, and developers keep itching to reinvent the vulnerability over and over...
If it were managed by Kerberos or domain policy I'd be okay with it, but the critical thing is that it's managed by the system administrator.
That let's parents do parent things, and the rest of us can safely lie.
Personally, I think this is the best solution, sysadmin controlled birth date. Want your kids to access everything, make their accounts 99. Want your kids protected, limit them to their real age or lower.
The slippery slop argument is a concern, but as long as it's system admin controlled, that's a win in my book for privacy and the "save the kids" crowd.
The qchq in the url isn't a coincidence, this was created by the British spy agency. It is used fairly commonly amongst cyber security folk, so its been fairly well vetted that its not uploading stuff to their cloud, but you can always load the page, disconnect your network and do what you want with it if you want to be paranoid.
Not to mention the traditional crowd (Lockheed, Boeing etc)
Nvidia has a lot to learn, GPUs are buy once, cry once. Munitions are disposable, and need to be replaced. When nvidia manages to fit a H100 in the body of a missile, the real money printing begins :)
If you try to make the argument that the LLMs are making you a better developer, I would expect pushback.
I've used LLMs for code generation, and the output has been subpar. Better than a novice, but not what I expect from a junior or higher. It is fast, but correctness and sanity is all over the shop.
My problem with lots of these posts is that they are from lazy developers, who are skipping the due diligence of actually validating that the code generated is correct.
If you want to post about how you use the tools, including your processes for ensuring correctness, I would have no objections.