Outside of what's essentially steam big picture mode, steamOS is just an immutable arch, there's not much support from valve for desktop mode use, you still need to know how to linux, particularly containerized programs.
The GabeCube is going to be console-like first with linux desktop features a side-thought. Mess around with a steam deck sometime so you can know what to expect. I love mine but doing anything outside of the big picture mode does have a learning curve.
Idk, one of my co-workers on another team specifically brought up to their manager that what it's currently being trained to do is basically a majority of the managers job and he didn't get it.
Maybe he does and was just playing it off though 🤷
"Additionally, I’ve been writing software for a living for almost 30 years, and I could say the exact same thing about a lot of human generated code I’ve reviewed during that time. I don’t even know how often I’ve explained basic stuff like “security goes in the backend, not in the frontend” to humans."
This is the part I find so funny, as if all humans, hell all DEVS are actually capable of writing perfect code every time. Edit: (Reread and realized I didn't phrase this right) Whereas a normal-lower end dev wouldnt be able to write that program in less time than an LLM could whip up a similarly buggy program.
Like do y'all (expert coders who write things like this article) interact with software outside of what you actually write? I've literally never worked with a larger program that didn't have some kind of bug or strange behavior, it's just how it goes.
I do think it's an interesting dynamic we are seeing play out, I've been wanting to learn and get better at code and this is simultaneously a great time to learn and a horrible time to learn lmao.
I remember trying to use some pre-LLM OCRs and it often got hand-writing really poorly. LLM backed seems to perform generally better, now typed OCR was usually pretty good.
Use Kate in command line over ssh?