Watching AI drive Microsoft employees insane

902 laiysb 474 5/21/2025, 10:57:08 AM old.reddit.com ↗

Comments (474)

diggan · 11h ago
Interesting that every comment has "Help improve Copilot by leaving feedback using the or buttons" suffix, yet none of the comments received any feedback, either positive or negative.

> This seems like it's fixing the symptom rather than the underlying issue?

This is also my experience when you haven't setup a proper system prompt to address this for everything an LLM does. Funniest PRs are the ones that "resolves" test failures by removing/commenting out the test cases, or change the assertions. Googles and Microsofts models seems more likely to do this than OpenAIs and Anthropics models, I wonder if there is some difference in their internal processes that are leaking through here?

The same PR as the quote above continues with 3 more messages before the human seemingly gives up:

> please take a look

> Your new tests aren't being run because the new file wasn't added to the csproj

> Your added tests are failing.

I can't imagine how the people who have to deal with this are feeling. It's like you have a junior developer except they don't even read what you're telling them, and have 0 agency to understand what they're actually doing.

Another PR: https://github.com/dotnet/runtime/pull/115732/files

How are people reviewing that? 90% of the page height is taken up by "Check failure", can hardly see the code/diff at all. And as a cherry on top, the unit test has a comment that say "Test expressions mentioned in the issue". This whole thing would be fucking hilarious if I didn't feel so bad for the humans who are on the other side of this.

surgical_fire · 10h ago
> I can't imagine how the people who have to deal with this are feeling. It's like you have a junior developer except they don't even read what you're telling them, and have 0 agency to understand what they're actually doing.

That comparison is awful. I work with quite a few Junior developers and they can be competent. Certainly don't make the silly mistakes that LLMs do, don't need nearly as much handholding, and tend to learn pretty quickly so I don't have to keep repeating myself.

LLMs are decent code assistants when used with care, and can do a lot of heavy lifting, they certainly speed me up when I have a clear picture of what I want to do, and they are good to bounce off ideas when I am planning for something. That said, I really don't see how it could meaningfully replace an intern however, much less an actual developer.

safety1st · 10h ago
These GH interactions remind me of one of those offshore software outsourcing firms on Upwork or Freelancer.com that bid $3/hr on every project that gets posted. There's a PM who takes your task and gives it to a "developer" who potentially has never actually written a line of code, but maybe they've built a WordPress site by pointing and clicking in Elementor or something. After dozens of hours billed you will, in fact, get code where the new file wasn't added to the csproj or something like that, and when you point it out, they will bill another 20 hours, and send you a new copy of the project, where the test always fails. It's exactly like this.

Nice to see that Microsoft has automated that, failure will be cheaper now.

dkdbejwi383 · 10h ago
This gives me flashbacks to when my big corporate former employer outsourced a bunch of work offshore.

An outsourced contractor was tasked with a very simple job as their first task - update a single dependency, which required just a bump of the version and no code changes - after three days of them seemingly struggling to even understand what they were asked to do, inability to clone the repo, failure to install the necessary tooling on their machine, they ended up getting fired from the project. Complete waste of money, and the time of those of us having to delegate and review this work.

98codes · 7h ago
Makes me wonder if the pattern will continue to follow, and we start to find certain agents—maybe due to config, maybe due to the training codebase and the codebase they're pointed at—that will become the single one out of the group we can rely on.

Give instructions, get good code back. That's the dream, though I think the pieces that need to fall into place for particular cases will prevent reaching that top quality bar in the general case.

AbstractH24 · 10h ago
> These GH interactions remind me of one of those offshore software outsourcing firms on Upwork or Freelancer.com that bid $3/hr on every project that gets posted

Those have long been the folks I’ve seen at the biggest risk of being replaced by AI. Tasks that didn’t rely on human interaction or much training, just brute force which can be done from anywhere.

And for them, that $3/hr was really good money.

voxic11 · 10h ago
Actually the AI might still be more expensive at this point. But give it a few years I'm sure they will get the costs down.
kamaal · 9h ago
>>These GH interactions remind me of one of those offshore software outsourcing firms on Upwork or Freelancer.com that bid $3/hr on every project that gets posted.

This level of smugness is why outsourcing still continues to exist. The kind of things you talk about were rare. And were mostly exaggerated to create anti-outsourcing narrative. None of that led to outsourcing actually going away simply because people are actually getting good work done.

Bad quality things are cheap != All cheap things are bad.

Same will work with AI too, while people continue to crap on AI, things will only improve, people will be more productive with AI, get more and bigger things done for cheaper and better. This is just inevitable given how things are going now.

>>There's a PM who takes your task and gives it to a "developer" who potentially has never actually written a line of code, but maybe they've built a WordPress site by pointing and clicking in Elementor or something.

In the peak of outsourcing wave. Both the call center people and IT services people had internal training and graduation standards that were quite brutal and mad attrition rates.

Exams often went along the lines of having to write whole ass projects without internet help in hours. Theory exams that had like -2 marks on getting things wrong. Dozens of exams, projects, coding exams, on-floor internships, project interviews.

>>After dozens of hours billed you will, in fact, get code where the new file wasn't added to the csproj or something like that, and when you point it out, they will bill another 20 hours, and send you a new copy of the project, where the test always fails. It's exactly like this.

Most IT services billing had pivoted away from hourly billing, to fixed time and material in the 2000s itself.

>>It's exactly like this.

Very much like outsourcing. AI is here to stay man. Deal with it. Its not going anywhere. For like $20 a month, companies will have same capability as a full time junior dev.

This is NOT going away. Its here to stay. And will only get better with time.

Quarrelsome · 5h ago
> This level of smugness is why outsourcing still continues to exist. The kind of things you talk about were rare. And were mostly exaggerated to create anti-outsourcing narrative. None of that led to outsourcing actually going away simply because people are actually getting good work done

I used upwork (when it was elance) quite a lot in a startup I was running at the time, so I have direct experience of this and its _not_ a lie or "mostly exaggerated", it was a very real effect.

The trick was always to weed out these types by posting a very limited job for a cheap amount and accepting around five or more bids from broad prices in order to review the developers. Whoever is actually competent then gets the work you actually wanted done in the first place. I found plenty of competant devs at competitive prices this way but some of the submissions I got from the others were laughable. But you just accept the work, pay them their small fee, and never speak to them again.

whatshisface · 9h ago
There's no reason why an outsourcing firm would charge less for work of equal quality. If a company outsourced to save money, they'd get one of the shops that didn't get the job done.
kamaal · 9h ago
>>There's no reason why an outsourcing firm would charge less for work of equal quality.

Most of this works because of price arbitrage. And continues to work that way, not just with outsourcing but with manufacturing too.

Remember those days, when people were going around telling Chinese products where crap? That didn't really work and more things only got made in China.

This is all so similar to early days of Google search, its just that cost of a search was low enough that finding things got easier and ubiquitous. That same is unfolding with AI now. People have a hard time believing a big part of their thinking can be outsourced to something that costs $20/month.

How can something as good as me be cheaper than me? You are asking the wrong question. For centuries now, every decade a machine(s) has arrived that can do a thing cheaper than what the human was doing at the time. Its not exactly impossible. You are only living in denial by asking this question, this has been how it has worked the day since humans found way of mimicking human work through machines. We didn't get here in a day.

dttze · 9h ago
It’s not 20, it’s 200+. And that will only get more expensive.
kamaal · 9h ago
Again I don't know what people mean when they say it will get more expensive. This is a wrong way of looking at the issue.

Pretty sure cars are more expensive than horse carriage, or that iPhones are/were more expensive than button phones. You can cite so many such examples. Like photocopying machines, or cameras, or wrist watches, or even things like radio, television etc.

More importantly, sometimes how you do things change. And that changes how you go about your life in a very fundamental way.

That is what internet was about when it first came out, thats what internet search, online maps, or search etc etc were.

AI will change how you go about living your life, in a very fundamental way.

vel0city · 7h ago
> Pretty sure cars are more expensive than horse carriage

Basic car ownership can be quite a bit cheaper than a horse + carriage.

The horse will probably eat $10-20/day in food. $600/mo in just food costs. Not including vet bills and what not.

A decent and cheap horse will probably cost you $3k up front. Add in several thousand dollars more for the carriage.

A horse requires practically daily maintenance. A carriage will still require some maintenance.

A horse requires a good bit more land, plus the space to store the carriage. Plus, all the extra time and work mounting and unmounting your horse whenever you need to go.

A horse and carriage isn't really cheaper than a cheap car and way less functional.

0x500x79 · 5h ago
Theres a 3 point way to say this. Usually technology: * More efficient * Higher Quality * Less effort

Most successful technologies provide multiple of these benefits. What is terrible, and the direction we are going right now, is that these new systems (or offshoring like we are talking about here) seem/are "Less Effort" but do not hit the other two axioms. This is a very dangerous place to be.

People would rather be lazy than roll their sleeves up and focus, especially in our attention diverting world.

dttze · 8h ago
This isn’t like those things. You’re comparing physical goods to a token generator.

LLMs are being made into another rental extraction system and should be viewed as such.

fragmede · 8h ago
The worry, that is borne out by the pricing of Uber, isn't that LLMs are more expensive than the generation before, but that it's a VC play. Get into market, undercut your competitors until they go bust, then raiser prices. Ubers used to be $1, which was obviously totally unsustainable. Now Uber's only competing platform is Lyft, and Uber is making money as of their latest quarter. Ubers are not at least $10 if not $50 $100. ChatGPT's $20/month looks like $1 Ubers to some. Only insiders know how much it actually costs OpenAI to support ChatGPT users. I will note, however, that GitHub free private repos are supported by corporations paying for their own private GitHub, so it's unclear that ChatGPT's $20/month ever has to be raised with enough $200 or $2,000 or $20,000/month users.
sbarre · 10h ago
I think that was the point of the comparison..

It's not like a regular junior developer, it's much worse.

spacemadness · 7h ago
And yet it got the job and lots of would be juniors didn’t, and it seems to be costing the company more in compute and senior dev handholding. Nice work silicon valley.
preisschild · 10h ago
> That said, I really don't see how it could meaningfully replace an intern however

And even if it could, how do you get senior devs without junior devs? ^^

surgical_fire · 5h ago
What is making it difficult for Junior devs to be hired is not AI. That is a diversion.

The raise in interest rates a couple of years ago triggered many layoffs in the industry. When that happens salaries are squeezed. Experienced people work for less, and juniors have trouble finding job because they are now competing against people with plenty of experience.

lazide · 10h ago
Sounds like a next quarter problem (I wish it was /s).
PKop · 8h ago
Did you miss the "except" in his sentence? He was making the point this is worse than junior devs for all reasons listed.
surgical_fire · 5h ago
I was agreeing with him, by saying that the comparison is awful.

Not sure how it can be read otherwise.

yubblegum · 10h ago
This field (SE - when I started out back in late 80s) was enjoyable. Now it has become toxic, from the interview process, to imitating "big tech" songs and dances by small fry companies, and now this. Is there any joy left in being a professional software developer?
bluefirebrand · 10h ago
Making quite a bit of money brings me a lot of joy compared to other industries

But the actual software part? I'm not sure anymore

diggan · 10h ago
> This field (SE - when I started out back in late 80s) was enjoyable. Now it has become toxic

I feel the same way today, but I got started around 2012 professionally. I wonder how much of this is just our fading optimism after seeing how shit really works behind the scenes, and how much the industry itself is responsible for it. I know we're not the only two people feeling this way either, but it seems all of us have different timescales from when it turned from "enjoyable" to "get me out of here".

salawat · 9h ago
My issue stems from the attitudes of the people we're doing it for. I started out doing it for humanity. To bring the bicycle for the mind to everyone.

Then one day I woke up and realized the ones paying me were also the ones using it to run over or do circles around everyone else not equipped with a bicycle yet; and were colluding to make crippled bicycles that'd never liberate the masses as much as they themselves had been previously liberated; bicycles designed to monitor, or to undermine their owner, or more disgustingly, their "licensee".

So I'm not doing it anymore. I'm not going to continue making deliberately crippled, overly complex, legally encumbered bicycles for the mind, purely intended as subjects for ARR extraction.

ecocentrik · 9h ago
It's hard to find anything wrong with your conclusions except that you're leaving out the part where they're trying to automate our contributions to devalue our skills. I'm surprised there isn't a movement to halt the use of AI for certain tasks in software development on the same level as the active resistance from doctors against socialized medicine in the US. These expensive toys will inevitably introduce catastrophic level bugs and security vulnerabilities into critical infrastructure software. Right now, most of Microsoft's product offerings, like GitHub and Office, are critical infrastructure software.
ryandrake · 7h ago
> I'm surprised there isn't a movement to halt the use of AI for certain tasks in software development on the same level as the active resistance from doctors against socialized medicine in the US.

This is also shocking to me. Especially here on HN! Every tech CEO on earth is salivating over AI coding because they want it to devalue and/or replace their expensive human software developers. Whether or not that will actually happen, that's the purpose of building all of these "agentic" coding tools. And here we are, dumbass software engineers, cheerleading for and building the means of our own destruction! We downplay it with bullshit like "Oh, but AI is just a way to augment our work, it will never really replace us or lower our compensation!" Wild how excited we all are about this.

aaronbaugher · 7h ago
I think it's similar to a thread we had here recently about why it's impossible to unionize tech workers. Basically, most tech workers don't like other tech workers (or other people, really) very much, so there's very little camaraderie of the sort you need to get people to team up and take on a shared enemy. Instead, we all think we're smarter than the other guy, so he'll be the one who gets fired while I thrive in the new situation.
ryandrake · 6h ago
I think a lot of software engineers (especially those who post on HN) think of themselves as top-1% Captains Of Industry, who would never benefit from a union. "Unions only help those guys lower on the totem pole than me!" says every software engineer out there, so they disregard it as something that could help them. We all think we are Temporarily Embarrassed John Carmacks.
ecocentrik · 5h ago
That doesn't explain why doctors that see themselves as top earners didn't have a problem banding together. Social organization doesn't require unions in socialist/communist sense. It can also be accomplished through other professional organizations like AMC.
blibble · 4h ago
> This is also shocking to me. Especially here on HN!

this website is owned and operated by a VC, who build fortunes off exploiting these people

"workers and oppressed peoples of all countries, unite!" is the last thing I'd expect to see here

BugheadTorpeda6 · 6h ago
HackerNews is driven by a particular kind of radical libertarian philosophy believing person. You don't come up with the sorts of pump and dump start up ideas that typically come out of Y Combinator without being either sociopathic or delusional in the above way.

Anybody who thinks this place represents the average working or middle class programmer hasn't been paying much attention. They fool a lot of people by being social liberal to go along with their economic liberalism.

ecocentrik · 6h ago
HN is obviously not the right forum for the skill value dilution discussion but not seeing deep discussion about responsible LLM usage from developers or major software companies is really troubling. If Microsoft is stupid enough to dogfood their unrefined LLM based tools on critical software in the name of increased earnings and shareholder value, I'm sure the entire enterprise stack is hoping to do the same.
yubblegum · 5h ago
Because other professional fields have not been subjected to a long running effort to commoditize software engineers. And further, most other (cognitive) professionals are not subject to 'age shaming' and discounting of experience.

We should not forget that on the other side of this issue are equally smart and motivated people and they too are aware of the power dynamics involved. For example, the phenomena of younger programmers poo pooing experienced engineers was a completely new valuation paradigm pushed by interested parties at some point around the dotcom bubble.

Doctors with n years in the OR will not take shit from some intern that just came out of school. But we were placed in that situation at some point after '00. So the fundamental issue is that there is an (engineered imho) generational divide, and coupled with age discrimination in hiring (again due to interested parties' incentives) has a created a situation where one side is accumiliating generational wealth and power and the other side (us developers) are divided by age and the ones with the most skin in the game are naive youngsters who have no clue and have been taught to hate on "millenials" and "old timers" etc.

diggan · 8h ago
> These expensive toys will inevitably introduce catastrophic level bugs and security vulnerabilities into critical infrastructure software. Right now, most of Microsoft's product offerings, like GitHub and Office, are critical infrastructure software.

So nothing new? Just this/last month, it seems like the multi-select "open/close" button in the GitHub PR UI was just straight up broken. No one seemed to have noticed until I opened a bug report, and it continued being broken for weeks before they finally fixed it. Not the first time I encounter this on Microsoft properties, they seem to constantly push out broken shit, and no one seem to even notice until some sad user (like me) happens to stumble across it.

SimianSci · 9h ago
Have you considered contributing to the Free Software Movement?

I am speculating that this "AI Revolution" may lead to some revitalization of the movement as it would allow individual contributors the ability to compete on the same levels as proprietary software providers who previously had to employ legions of developers to create their software.

fragmede · 8h ago
But what's the business model? Why would I pay for support and/or development on an open source project if I can just run it through and LLM?
salawat · 8h ago
Considered but that'll probably only happen once I've alternative sources of income lined up that doesn't shackle my IP contributions off hours to my employers, which means bringing in enough to get a couple hours with an attorney that knows what they are doing. I am not one. I have merely read some books on it.
jimbokun · 2h ago
What are you doing now instead?
bwfan123 · 8h ago
It happens in waves. For a period, there was an oversupply of cs engineers, and now, the supply will shrink. On top of this, the BS put out by AI code will require experienced engineers to fix.

So, for experienced engineers, I see a great future fixing the shit show that is AI-code.

iamleppert · 9h ago
No, there is absolutely no joy left.
sweman · 10h ago
>> Is there any joy left in being a professional software developer?

Yes, when your 100k quarterly RSU drop lands

camdenreslink · 9h ago
A very very small percentage of professional software developers get that.
spacemadness · 7h ago
Sounds like the type of person OP was complaining about. Usually executives or very lucky ones who started at Nvidia 6-7 years ago, etc.
coldpie · 9h ago
I've been looking at getting a CDL and becoming a city bus driver, or maybe a USPS driver or deliveryman or clerk or something.
yubblegum · 8h ago
I hear you. Same boat just can't figure out the life jacket yet. (You do fine wood work, why not that? I am considering finding entry level work in architecture myself - kicking myself for giving that up for software now. Did not see this shit show coming.)
coldpie · 8h ago
> You do fine wood work, why not that?

Thank you. It's something I'm actively pursuing, I'm hoping to finish some chairs this spring and see if any local shops are interested in stocking them. But I'm skeptical I could find enough business to make it work full-time, pay for my family's health insurance, and so on. We'll see.

mrweasel · 10h ago
At least we can tell the junior developers to not submit a pull-request before they have the tests running locally.

At what point does the human developers just give up and close the PRs as "AI garbage". Keep the ones that works, then just junk the rest. I feel that at some point entertaining the machine becomes unbearable and people just stops doing it or rage close the PRs.

pydry · 10h ago
When their performance reviews stop depending upon them not doing that.

Microsoft's stock price is dependent on them proving that this is a success.

Qem · 9h ago
> Microsoft's stock price is dependent on them proving that this is a success.

Perhaps this explains the recent firings that affected faster CPython and other projects. While they throw money at AI but sucess still doesn't materialize, they need to make the books look good for yet another quarter through the old-school reliable method of laying off people left and right.

mrweasel · 9h ago
What happens when they can't prove that and development efficiency starts falling, because developers spend 50% of their time battling copilot?
blibble · 9h ago
they'll just add more and more half-baked features

it's not as if Microsoft's share price has ever reflected the quality of their products

latentsea · 9h ago
All that's required is enough mental gymnastics for someone to feel like they can call it a success. At no point is it actually required to be one.
mrweasel · 8h ago
You're probably correct: "Our developers a very happy with CoPilot. They now spend 50% of their time interacting with our AI offerings, either via VSCode, Github or Clippy."

No need to specify why they are interact with it, all engagement is good engagement.

ryandrake · 7h ago
By this measurement, a slower compiler is better than a faster one, because developers are using it for more of their time. Totally bonkers, Microsoft!
pydry · 7h ago
Remember what happened to the markets when deepseek came out?
vasco · 11h ago
> improve Copilot by leaving feedback using the or buttons" suffix, yet none of the comments received any feedback, either positive or negative

Why do they even need it? Success is code getting merged 1st shot, failure gets worse the more requests for changes the agent gets. Asking for manual feedback seems like a waste of time. Measure cycle time and rate of approvals and change failure rate like you would for any developer.

dfxm12 · 8h ago
It's like you have a junior developer except they don't even read what you're telling them, and have 0 agency to understand what they're actually doing.

Anyone who has dealt with Microsoft support knows this feeling well. Even talking to the higher level customer success folks feels like talking to a brick wall. After dozens of support cases, I can count on zero hands the number of issues that were closed satisfactorily.

I appreciate Microsoft eating their dogfood here, but please don't make me eat it too! If anyone from MS is reading this, please release finished products that you are prepared to support!

throwup238 · 8h ago
> Interesting that every comment has "Help improve Copilot by leaving feedback using the or buttons" suffix, yet none of the comments received any feedback, either positive or negative.

The feedback buttons open a feedback form modal, they don’t reflect the number of feedback given like the emoji button. If you leave feedback, it will reflect your thumbs up/down (hiding the other button), it doesn’t say anything about whether anyone else has left feedback (I’ve tried it on my own repos).

xnorswap · 11h ago
> How are people reviewing that? 90% of the page height is taken up by "Check failure",

Typically, you wouldn't bother manually reviewing something until the automated checks have passed.

diggan · 11h ago
I dunno, when I review code, I don't review what's automatically checked anyways, but thinking about the change/diff in a broader context, and whatever isn't automatically checked. And the earlier you can steer people in the right direction, the better. But maybe this isn't the typical workflow.
xnorswap · 11h ago
The reality is more nuanced, there are situations where you'd want to glance over it anyway, such as looking for an opportunity to coach a junior dev.

I'd rather hop in and get them on the right path rather than letting them struggle alone, particularly if they're struggling.

If it's another senior developer though I'd happily leave them to it to get the unit tests all passing before I take a proper look at their work.

But as a general principle, please at least get a PR through formatting checks before assigning it to a person.

Cthulhu_ · 10h ago
It's a waste of time tbh; fixing the checks may require the author to rethink or rewrite their entire solution, which means your review no longer applies.

Let them finish a pull request before spending time reviewing it. That said, a merge request needs to have an issue written before it's picked up, so that the author does not spend time on a solution before the problem is understood. That's idealism though.

phkahler · 9h ago
>> And the earlier you can steer people in the right direction, the better.

The earliest feedback you can get comes from the compiler. If it won't build successfully don't submit the PR.

prossercj · 9h ago
This comment on that PR is pure gold. The bots are talking to each other:

https://github.com/dotnet/runtime/pull/115732#issuecomment-2...

worldsayshi · 11h ago
> How are people reviewing that?

I agree that not auto-collapsing repeated annotations is an annoying bug in the github interface.

But just pointing out that annotations can be hidden in the ... menu to the right (which I just learned).

jon-wood · 10h ago
I'm not entirely sure why they're running linters on every available platform to begin with, it seems like a massive waste of compute to me when surely the output will be identical because it's analysing source code, not behaviour.
codyvoda · 10h ago
or press “a”
ta1243 · 10h ago
> @copilot please read the following Contributor License Agreement(CLA). If you agree with the CLA, please reply with the following information.
belter · 5h ago
This whole thread from yesterday take a whole different meaning: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44031432

Comment in the GitHub discussion:

"...You and I and every programmer who hasn't been living under a rock knows that AI isn't ready to be adopted at this scale yet, on the premier; 100M-user code-hosting platform. It doesn't make any sense except in brain-washed corporate-talk like "we are testing today what it can do tomorrow".

I'm not saying that this couldn't be an adequate change some day, perhaps even in a few years but we all know this isn't it today. It's 100% financial-driven hype with a pinch of we're too big to fail mentality..."

marmakoide · 10h ago
Hot take : the whole LLM craze is fed by a delusion. LLM are good at mimicking human language, capturing some semantics on the way. With a large enough training set, the amount of semantic captured covers a large fraction of what the average human knows. This gives the illusion of intelligence, and the humans extrapolates on LLM capabilities, like actual coding. Because large amounts of code from textbooks and what not is on the training set, the illusion is convincing for people with shallow coding abilities.

And then, while the tech is not mature, running on delusion and sunken costs, it's actually used for production stuffs. Butlerian Jihad when

nyarlathotep_ · 2h ago
I think the bubble is already a bit past peak.

My sophisticated sentiment analysis (talking to co-workers other professional programmers and IT workers, HN and Reddit comments) seems to indicate a shift--there's a lot less storybook "Ay Eye is gonna take over the world" talk and a lot more distrust and even disdain than you'd see even 6 months ago.

Moves like this will not go over well.

otabdeveloper4 · 8h ago
> Butlerian Jihad when

I estimate two more years for the bubble to pop.

spacecadet · 11h ago
"I wonder if there is some difference in their internal processes that are leaking through here?"

Maybe, but likely it is reality and their true company culture leaking through. Eventually some higher eq execs might come to the very late realization that they cant actually lead or build a worthwhile and productive company culture and all that remains is an insane reflection of that.

cruffle_duffle · 8h ago
It’s probably the junior devs that get to review these PRs. That and interns.
nirui · 31m ago
I recently, meaning hours ago, had this delightful experience watching the Eric of Google, which everybody love, including he's extra curricular girl friend and wife, talking about AI. He seemed to believe AI is under-hyped after tried it out himself: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=id4YRO7G0wE

He also said in the video:

> I brought a rocket company because it was like interesting. And it's an area that I'm not an expert in and I wanted to be a expert. So I'm using Deep Research (TM). And these systems are spending 10 minutes writing Deep Papers (TM) that's true for most of them. (Them he starts to talk about computation and "it typically speaks English language", very cohesively, then stopped the thread abruptly) (Timestamp 02:09)

Let me quote out the important in what he said: "it's an area that I'm not an expert in".

During my use of AI (yeah, I don't hate AI), I found that the current generative (I call them pattern reconstruction) systems has this great ability to Impress An Idiot. If you have no knowledge in the field, you maybe thinking the generated content is smart, until you've gained some depth enough to make you realize the slops hidden in it.

If you work at the front line, like those guys from Microsoft, of course you know exactly what should be done, but, the company leadership maybe consists of idiots like Eric who got impressed by AI's ability to choose smart sounding words without actually knowing if the words are correct.

I guess maybe one day the generative tech could actually write some code that is correct and optimal, but right now it seems that day is far from now.

bramhaag · 11h ago
Seeing Microsoft employees argue with an LLM for hours instead of actually just fixing the problem must be a very encouraging sight for businesses that have built their products on top of .NET.
mikrl · 9h ago
I remember before mass LLM adoption, reading an issue on GitHub where an increasingly frustrated user was failing to properly describe a blocking issue, and the increasingly frustrated maintainer was failing to get them to stick to the issue template.

Now you don’t even need the frustrated end user!

shultays · 9h ago
one day both sides will be AI so we can all relax and enjoy our mojitos
marcosdumay · 7h ago
Well, people have been putting M-x doctor to talk with M-x eliza for decades.
some_random · 7h ago
when that day arrives we'll won't be relaxing, we will be put through a wood chipper
nashashmi · 11h ago
I sometimes feel like that is the right outcome for bad management and bad instructions. Only this time they can’t blame the junior engineer and are left to only blame themselves.
snackernews · 1h ago
I think we all know they won’t.

I am genuinely curious though to see the strategies they employ to absolve themselves of guilt and foolishness.

Is there precedent for the entire exec and management class embracing a new trend to this kind of extent, then it blowing up in their faces?

qoez · 10h ago
They'll probably blame openai/the AI instead.
nashashmi · 10h ago
AI has reproducible outcomes. If someone else can make it work, then they should too.
daveguy · 7h ago
This is just false. Do these models even have reproducible outcomes with a temperature of 0? Aren't they also severely restricted with a temp of 0?
nashashmi · 6h ago
Some randomization is intentionally introduced. We are not accounting for that. Otherwise, it should be able to give you the same information.
gwervc · 9h ago
Especially painful when one of said employee is Stephen Toub, who is famous for his .net performance blog posts.
svaha1728 · 8h ago
I was thinking that too. He's a great programmer, and at this point I can't imagine he's having fun 'prompting' an LLM to write correct code.
daveguy · 7h ago
I hope he writes a personal essay about the experience after he leaves Microsoft. Not that he will leave anytime soon, but the first hand accounts of how they are talking about these systems internally are going to be even more entertaining than the wtf PRs.
square_usual · 6h ago
This comment thread is incredible. It's like fanfiction of a real person. Of course this engineer I respect shares my opinion. Not only that, he's obviously going to quit because of this. And then he'll write a blog post I'll get to enjoy.

Anyway, this is his public, stated opinion on this: https://github.com/dotnet/runtime/pull/115762#issuecomment-2...

svaha1728 · 3h ago
If he reiterates that comment to me after two beers in a relaxing bar I might believe him.
daveguy · 2h ago
Hahaha. 1000% this. Also, first example from the linked video: a "not vibe coded, promise" example of an ascii space invaders clone... Of all the examples of "has a bunch of training code data since the 80s", this is the best representation of exactly what LLM coding is capable of "in 8 minutes".
mock-possum · 6h ago
You don’t think he’s having fun getting laid a ton for playing with computers?
xeonmc · 5h ago
I don’t imagine getting laid with computers are particularly enjoyable for humans.
AllegedAlec · 2h ago
Given that Microsoft always decided to Will Not Fix issues because they went "oh this thing is throwing errors? Just ignore them". THey're numbskulls that are high on their own farts just as much as their managers. They deserve everything that's happening to them.
pier25 · 1h ago
Yeah it's quite disheartening.

I recently spent a couple of months studying C# and .NET and working on my first project with it.

.NET, Blazor, etc are not known for a fast release schedule... but if things are going to become even slower with this AI crap I wonder if I made the right call.

I'm quite happy how things are today for making web APIs but I wish Blazor and other frameworks were in a much better shape.

Kwpolska · 1h ago
.NET has major releases every year. How is that slow for a programming platform/framework?
cratermoon · 1m ago
Go has a six month release cycle. Rust releases a new stable every six weeks.
LunaSea · 4h ago
Microsoft closed their recently acquired advertisement buy-side platform Xander Invest because they are replacing it with an AI-only platform.

They only gave their customers 9 months to migrate away.

I'm expecting that Microsoft did this to artificially pump up their AI usage numbers for next year by forcibly removing non-AI alternatives.

This only one example in AdTech but I expect other industries to be hit as well.

svick · 10h ago
You don't want them to experiment with new tools? The main difference now is that the experiment is public.
stickfigure · 9h ago
It's pretty obviously a failed experiment. Why keep repeating it? Try again in another 3 months.

The answer is probably that the Copilot team is using the rest of the engineering organization as testers. Great for the Copilot team, frustrating for everyone else.

raydev · 3h ago
> It's pretty obviously a failed experiment

For it to be "failed" it would have to also be finished/completed. They are likely continuously making tweaks, this thing was just released.

gmm1990 · 10h ago
I wouldn't necessarily call that just an experiment if the same requests aren't being fixed without copilot and the ai changes could get merged.

I would say the copilot system isn't really there yet for these kinds of changes, you don't have to run experiments on a language framework to figure that out.

flmontpetit · 9h ago
By all means. Just not on one of the most popular software development frameworks in the world. Maybe that can wait until after the concept is proven.
mystified5016 · 6h ago
Yeah, seems to me that breaking .NET with this garbage will be, uh, extremely bad
PKop · 8h ago
Nah I'd prefer they focus on writing code themselves to improve .NET not babysitting a spam-machine
empath75 · 8h ago
The point of this exercise for Microsoft isn't to produce usable code right now, but to use and improve copilot.
lloydatkinson · 8h ago
That is essentially what I tried to say in my comment there but don't think they wanted to hear it.
ozim · 10h ago
That is why they just fired 7k people so they don’t argue with LLM but let it do the work /s
kruuuder · 10h ago
A comment on the first pull request provides some context:

> The stream of PRs is coming from requests from the maintainers of the repo. We're experimenting to understand the limits of what the tools can do today and preparing for what they'll be able to do tomorrow. Anything that gets merged is the responsibility of the maintainers, as is the case for any PR submitted by anyone to this open source and welcoming repo. Nothing gets merged without it meeting all the same quality bars and with us signing up for all the same maintenance requirements.

abxyz · 10h ago
The author of that comment, an employee of Microsoft, goes on to say:

> It is my opinion that anyone not at least thinking about benefiting from such tools will be left behind.

The read here is: Microsoft is so abuzz with excitement/panic about AI taking all software engineering jobs that Microsoft employees are jumping on board with Microsoft's AI push out of a fear of "being left behind". That's not the confidence inspiring the statement they intended it to be, it's the opposite, it underscores that this isn't the .net team "experimenting to understand the limits of what the tools" but rather the .net team trying to keep their jobs.

Verdex · 6h ago
The "left behind" mantra that I've been hearing for a while now is the strange one to me.

Like, I need to start smashing my face into a keyboard for 10000 hours or else I won't be able to use LLM tools effectively.

If LLM is this tool that is more intuitive than normal programming and adds all this productivity, then surely I can just wait for a bunch of others to wear themselves out smashing the faces on a keyboard for 10000 hours and then skim the cream off of the top, no worse for wear.

On the other hand, if using LLMs is a neverending nightmare of chaos and misery that's 10x harder than programming (but with the benefit that I don't actually have to learn something that might accidentally be useful), then yeah I guess I can see why I would need to get in my hours to use it. But maybe I could just not use it.

"Left behind" really only makes sense to me if my KPIs have been linked with LLM flavor aid style participation.

Ultimately, though, physics doesn't care about social conformity and last I checked the machine is running on physics.

spiffytech · 6h ago
There's a third way things might go: on the way to "superpower for everyone", we go through an extended phase where AI is only a superpower in skilled hands. The job market bifurcates around this. People who make strong use of it get first pick of the good jobs. People not making effective use of AI get whatever's left.

Kinda like how word processing used to be an important career skill people put on their resumes. Assuming AI becomes as that commonplace and accessible, will it happen fast enough that devs who want good jobs can afford to just wait that out?

Verdex · 6h ago
I'm willing to accept this as a possibility but the case analysis still doesn't make much sense to me.

If LLM usage is easy then I can't be left behind because it's easy. I'll pick it up in a weekend.

If LLM usage is hard AND I can otherwise do the hard things that LLMs are doing then I can't be left behind if I just do the hard things.

Still the only way I can be left behind is if LLM usage is nonsense or the same as just doing it yourself AND the important thing is telling managers that you've been using it for a long time.

Is the superpower bamboozling management with story time?

mquander · 4h ago
The obvious case in which you would be "left behind" is the one in which LLM usage is hard, and you cannot otherwise do the hard things that LLMs are doing (or you can do them, but much slower and/or to a lower standard of quality.)
Verdex · 2h ago
Sure. Although all of the hard things that I need to do I have a history of doing fast and to high standards.

Unless we're talking about hard things that I have up til now not been able to do. But do LLMs help with that in general?

This scenario breaks out of the hypothetical and the assertive and into the realm of the testable.

Provide for me the person who can use LLMs in a way that is hard but they are good at in order to do things which are hard but which they are currently bad at.

I will provide a task which is hard.

We can report back the result.

djhn · 4h ago
To be fair, word processing is a skill that that a majority of professionals continue to lack.

Law, civil service, academia and those who learnt enough LaTeX and HTML to understand text documents are in the minority.

smodo · 3h ago
Yeah and now people who can’t even write and never put in the effort to learn it are flooding the zone (my inbox) with useless 10 page memo’s.
Vicinity9635 · 8h ago
If you're not using it where it's useful to you, then I still wouldn't say you're getting left behind, but you're making your job harder than it has to be. Anecdotally I've found it useful mostly for writing unit tests and sometimes debugging (can be as effective as a rubber duck).

It's like the 2025 version not not using an IDE.

It's a powerful tool. You still need to know when to and when not to use it.

marcosdumay · 7h ago
> It's like the 2025 version not not using an IDE.

That's right on the mark. It will save you a little bit of work on tasks that aren't the bottleneck on your productivity, and disrupt some random tasks that may or may not be important.

It's makes so little difference that plenty of people in 2025 don't use an IDE, and looking at their performance from the outside one just can't tell.

Except that LLMs have less potential to improve your tasks and more potential to be disruptive.

Draiken · 6h ago
You're right on the money. I've been amongst the most productive developers in every place I've worked at for the past 10 years while not using an IDE. AI is not even close to as revolutionary as it's being sold. Unfortunately, as always, the ones buying this crap are not the ones that actually do the work.

Even for writing tests, you have to proof-read every single line and triple check they didn't write a broken test. It's absolutely exhausting.

nyarlathotep_ · 2h ago
I've encountered LLM generated comments that don't even reflect what the code is doing, or, worse, subtly describe the code inaccurately. The most insidious disenchanting code I've ever seen has been exactly of this sort, and it's getting produced by the boatload daily now.
ryandrake · 7h ago
Yea, "using an IDE" is a very good analogy. IDEs are not silver bullets, although they no doubt help some engineers. There are plenty of developers, on the other hand, who are amazingly productive without using IDEs.
javier2 · 5h ago
I feel like most people that swear by their AI are also the ones using text editors instead of full IDEs with actually working refactoring, relevant auto complete or never write tests
static_void · 8h ago
Tests are one of the areas where it performs least well. I can ask an LLM to summarize the functionality of code and be happy with the answer, but the tests it writes are the most facile unit tests, just the null hypothesis tests and the like. "Here's a test that the constructor works." Cool.
mrguyorama · 6h ago
They are the exact same unit tests I never needed help to write, and the exact same unit tests that I can just blindly keep hitting tab to write with Intellij's NON-AI autocomplete.
the-lazy-guy · 8h ago
This is Stephen Toub, who is the lead of many important .NET projects. I don't think he is worried about losing job anytime soon.

I think, we should not read too much into it. He is honestly exploring how much this tool can help him to resolve trivial issues. Maybe he was asked to do so by some of his bosses, but unlikely to fear the tool replacing him in the near future.

n8cpdx · 7h ago
They don’t have any problem firing experienced devs for no reason. Including on the .NET team (most of the .NET Android dev team was laid off recently).

https://www.theregister.com/2025/05/16/microsofts_axe_softwa...

Perhaps they were fired for failing to show enthusiasm for AI?

ryandrake · 7h ago
I can definitely believe that companies will start (or have already started) using "Enthusiasm about AI" as justification for a hire/promote/reprimand/fire decision. Adherence to the Church Of AI has become this weird purity test throughout the software industry!
low_tech_love · 7h ago
I love the fact that they seem to be asking it to do simple things because ”AI can do the simple boring things for us so we can focus on the important problems” and then it floods them with so many meaningless mumbo jumbo that they could have probably done the simple thing in a fraction of the time they take to keep correcting it continuously.
the-lazy-guy · 5h ago
It is called experimentation. That is how people evaluate new technology. By trying to do small things with it first. And if it doesn't work well - retrying later, once bigger issues are fixed.
spacemadness · 7h ago
Anyone not showing open AI enthusiasm at that level will absolutely be fired. Anyone speaking for MS will have to be openly enthusiastic or silent on the topic by now.
sensanaty · 7h ago
Didn't M$ just fire like 7000 people, many of which were involved in big important M$ projects? The CPython guys, for example.
bob1029 · 6h ago
Now, consider the game theory of saying "no" when your boss tells you to go play with the LLM in public.
the-lazy-guy · 5h ago
Hot take: CPython is not an important project for Microsoft, and it is not lead by them. The faster CPython project had questionable acheivement on top of that.

Half of Microsoft (especially server-side) still runs on dotnet. And there are no real contributors outside of microsoft. So it is a vital project.

hnthrow90348765 · 9h ago
TBF they are dogfooding this (good) but it's just not going well
dmix · 8h ago
> Microsoft employees are jumping on board with Microsoft's AI push out of a fear of "being left behind"

If they weren't experimenting with AI and coding and took a more conservative approach, while other companies like Anthropic was running similar experiments, I'm sure HN would also be critiquing them for not keeping up as a stodgy big corporation.

As long as they are willing to take risks by trying and failing on their own repos, it's fine in my books. Even though I'd never let that stuff touch a professional github repo personally.

jayGlow · 3h ago
exactly ignoring new technologies can be a death sentence for a company even one as large as Microsoft. even if this technology doesn't pay off its still a good idea to at least look into potential uses.
username135 · 9h ago
i dont think hey are mutually exclusive. jumping on board seems like the smart move if you're worried about losing your career. you also get to confirm your suspicions.
lcnPylGDnU4H9OF · 10h ago
This is important context given that it would be absurd for the managers to have already drawn a definitive conclusion about the models’ capabilities. An explicit understanding that the purpose of the exercise is to get a better idea of the current strengths and weaknesses of the models in a “real world” context makes this actually very reasonable.
mrguyorama · 5h ago
So why in public, and why in the most ham-fisted way, and why on important infrastructure, and why in such a terrible integration that it can't even verify that things compile before opening a PR!

In my org, we would have had to bypass precommit hooks to do this!

rsynnott · 11h ago
Beyond every other absurdity here, well, maybe Microsoft is different, but I would never assign a PR that was _failing CI_ to somebody. That that's happening feels like an admission that the thing doesn't _really_ work at all; if it worked even slightly, it would at least only assign passing PRs, but presumably it's bad enough that if they put in that requirement there would be no PRs.
sbarre · 10h ago
I feel like everyone is applying a worse-case narrative to what's going on here..

I see this as a work in progress.. I am almost certain the humans in the loop on these PRs are well aware of what's going on and have their expectations in check, and this isn't just "business as usual" like any other PR or work assignment.

This is a test. You can't improve a system without testing it on real world conditions.

How do we know they're not tweaking the Copilot system prompts and settings behind the scenes while they're doing this work?

Can no one see the possibility that what is happening in those PRs is exactly what all the people involved expected to have happen, and they're just going through the process of seeing what happens when you try to refine and coach the system to either success or failure?

When we adopted AI coding assist tools internally over a year ago we did almost exactly this (not directly in GitHub though).

We asked a bunch of senior engineers to see how far they could get by coaching the AI to write code rather than writing it themselves. We wanted to calibrate our expectations and better understand the limits, strengths and weaknesses of these new tools we wanted to adopt.

In most of those early cases we ended up with worse code than if it had been written by humans, but we learned a ton. We can also clearly see how much better things have gotten over time, since we have that benchmark to look back on.

rco8786 · 10h ago
I think people would be more likely to adopt this view if the overall narrative about AI is that it’s a work in progress and we expect it to get magnitudes better. But the narrative is that AI is already replacing human software engineers.

No comments yet

phkahler · 8h ago
>> I see this as a work in progress.. I am almost certain the humans in the loop on these PRs are well aware of what's going on and have their expectations in check, and this isn't just "business as usual" like any other PR or work assignment.

>> This is a test. You can't improve a system without testing it on real world conditions.

Software developers know to fix build problems before asking for a review. The AIs are submitting PRs in bad faith because they don't know any better. Compilers and other build tools produce errors when they fail, and the AI is ignoring this first line of feedback.

It is not a maintainers job to review code for syntax errors, or use of APIs that don't actually exist, or other silly mistakes. That's the compilers job and it does it well. The AI needs to take that feedback and fix the issues before escalating to humans.

sbarre · 8h ago
Like I said, I think you may be missing the point of the whole exercise.
mieubrisse · 10h ago
I was looking for exactly this comment. Everybody's gloating, "Wow look how dumb AI is! Haha, schadenfreude!" but this seems like just a natural part of the evolution process to me.

It's going to look stupid... until the point it doesn't. And my money's on, "This will eventually be a solved problem."

roxolotl · 9h ago
The question though is what is the time horizon of “eventually”. Very different decisions should be made if it’s 1 year, 2 years, 4 years, 8 years etc. To me it seems as if everyone is making decisions which are only reasonable if the time horizon is 1 year. Maybe they are correct and we’re on the cusp. Maybe they aren’t.

Good decision making would weigh the odds of 1 vs 8 vs 16 years. This isn’t good decision making.

rsynnott · 9h ago
Or _never_, honestly. Sometimes things just don't work out. See various 3d optical memory techs, which were constantly about to take over the world but never _quite_ made it to being actually useful, say.
ecb_penguin · 9h ago
> This isn’t good decision making.

Why is doing a public test of an emerging technology not good decision making?

> Good decision making would weigh the odds of 1 vs 8 vs 16 years.

What makes you think this isn't being done?

spacemadness · 2h ago
People seem like they’re gloating as the message received in this period of the hype cycle is that AI is as good as a junior dev without caveats and it in no way is suppose to be stupid.
Qem · 8h ago
> It's going to look stupid... until the point it doesn't. And my money's on, "This will eventually be a solved problem."

AI can remain stupid longer than you can remain solvent.

Workaccount2 · 8h ago
To some people, it will always look stupid.

I have met people who believe that automobile engineering peaked in the 1960's, and they will argue that until you are blue in the face.

grewsome · 9h ago
Sometimes the last 10% takes 90% of the time. It'll be interesting to see how this pans out, and whether it will eventually get to something that could be considered a solved problem.

I'm not so sure they'll get there. If the solved problem is defined as a sub-standard but low cost, then I wouldn't bet against that. A solution better than that though, I don't think I'd put my money on that.

solids · 9h ago
You are not addressing the point in the comment, why are failing CI changes assigned?
sbarre · 8h ago
I believe I did address that when I said "this is not business as usual work"..

So the typical expectations or norms of how code reviews and PRs work between humans don't really apply here.

That's my guess at least. I have no more insider information than you.

beefnugs · 6h ago
This is the exact reason AI sucks : there is no proper feedback loop.

EVERY single prompt should have the opportunity to get copied off into a permanent log where the end user triggers it : log all input, all output, human writes a summary of what he wanted to happen but did not, what he thinks might have went wrong, what he thinks should have happened (domain specific experts giving feedback about how things are fucking up) And then its still only useful with long term tracking like how someone actually made a training change to fix this exact failure scenario.

None of that exists, so just like "full self driving" was a pie in the sky bullshit dream that proved machine learning has an 80/20 never gonna fully work problem, same thing here

Dlanv · 8h ago
They said in the comments that currently the firewall is blocking it from checking tests for passing, and they need to fix that.

Otherwise it would check the tests are passing.

robotcapital · 8h ago
Replace the AI agent with any other new technology and this is an example of a company:

1. Working out in the open

2. Dogfooding their own product

3. Pushing the state of the art

Given that the negative impact here falls mostly (completely?) on the Microsoft team which opted into this, is there any reason why we shouldn't be supporting progress here?

JB_Dev · 8h ago
100% agree. i’m not sure why everyone is clowning on them here. This process is a win. Do people want this all being hidden instead in a forked private repo?

It’s showing the actual capabilities in practice. That’s much better and way more illuminating than what normally happens with sales and marketing hype.

rco8786 · 8h ago
Satya says: "I’d say maybe 20%, 30% of the code that is inside of our repos today and some of our projects are probably all written by software".

Zuckerberg says: "Our bet is sort of that in the next year probably … maybe half the development is going to be done by AI, as opposed to people, and then that will just kind of increase from there".

It's hard to square those statements up with what we're seeing happen on these PRs.

SketchySeaBeast · 8h ago
These are AI companies selling AI to executives, there's no need to square the circle, the people that they are talking to have no interest in what's happening in a repo, it's about convincing people to buy in early so they can start making money off their massive investments.
rco8786 · 7h ago
Why shouldn’t we judge a company’s capabilities against what their CEOs claim them to be capable of?
SketchySeaBeast · 6h ago
Oh, we absolutely should, but I'm saying that the reason the messaging is so discordant when compared with the capabilities is that the messaging isn't aimed at the people who are able to evaluate the capabilities.
polishdude20 · 7h ago
The fact that Zuck is saying "sort of" and "probably" is a big giveaway it's not going to happen.
daveguy · 7h ago
> Satya says: "I’d say maybe 20%, 30% of the code that is inside of our repos today and some of our projects are probably all written by software".

Well, that makes sense to me. Microsoft's software has gotten noticably worse in the last few years. So much that I have abandoned it for my daily driver for the first time since the early 2000s.

throwaway844498 · 8h ago
"Pushing the state of the art" and experimenting on a critical software development framework is probably not the best idea.
Dlanv · 8h ago
Why not, when it goes through code review by experienced software engineers who are experts on the subject in a codebase that is covered by extensive unit tests?
Draiken · 6h ago
I don't know about you, but it's much more likely for me to let a bug slip when I'm reviewing someone else's code than when I'm writing it myself.

This is what's happening right now: they are having to review every single line produced by this machine and trying to understand why it wrote what it wrote.

Even with experienced developers reviewing and lots of tests, the likelihood of bugs in this code compared to a real engineer working on it is much higher.

Why not do this on less mission critical software at the very least?

Right now I'm very happy I don't write anything on .NET if this is what they'll use as a guinea pig for the snake oil.

the-lazy-guy · 5h ago
That is exactly what you want to evaluate the thechnology. Not make a buggy commit into softwared not used by nobody and reviewed by an intern. But actually review it by domain professionals, in real world very well-tested project. So they could make an informed decision on where it lacks in capabilities and what needs to be fixed before they try it again.

I doubt that anyone expected to merge any of these PRs. Question is - can the machine solve minor (but non-trivial) issues listed on github in an efficient way with minimal guidance. Current answer is no.

Also, _if_ anything was to be merged, dotnet is dogfooded extensively at Microsoft, so bugs in it are much more likely to be noticed and fixed before you get a stable release on your plate.

constantcrying · 8h ago
Who is "we" and how and why would "we" "support" or not "support" anything.

Personally I just think it is funny that MS is soft launching a product into total failure.

mrguyorama · 5h ago
>supporting progress

This presupposes AI IS progress.

Nevermind that what this actually shows is an executive or engineering team that so buys their own hype that they didn't even try to run this locally and internally before blasting to the world that their system can't even ensure tests are passing before submitting a PR. They are having a problem with firewall rules blocking the system from seeing CI outcomes and that's part of why it's doing so badly, so why wasn't that verified BEFORE doing this on stage?

"Working out in the open" here is a bad thing. These are issues that SHOULD have been caught by an internal POC FIRST. You don't publicly do bullshit.

"Dogfooding" doesn't require throwing this at important infrastructure code. Does VS code not have small bugs that need fixing? Infrastructure should expect high standards.

"Pushing the state of the art" is comedy. This is the state of the art? This is pushing the state of the art? How much money has been thrown into the fire for this result? How much did each of those PRs cost anyway?

lawn · 6h ago
Because they're using it on an extremely popular repository that many people depend on?

And given the absolute garbage the AI is putting out the quality of the repo will drop. Either slop code will get committed or the bots will suck away time from people who could've done something productive instead.

globalise83 · 11h ago
Malicious compliance should be the order of the day. Just approve the requests without reviewing them and wait until management blinks when Microsoft's entire tech stack is on fire. Then quit your job and become a troubleshooter on x3 the pay.
sbarre · 10h ago
I know this is meant to sound witty or clever, but who actually wants to behave this way at their job?

I'll never understand the antagonistic "us vs. them" mentality people have with their employer's leadership, or people who think that you should be actively sabotaging things or be "maliciously compliant" when things aren't perfect or you don't agree with some decision that was made.

To each their own I guess, but I wouldn't be able to sleep well at night.

HelloMcFly · 10h ago
It’s worth recognizing that the tension between labor and capital historical reality, not just a modern-day bad attitude. Workers and leadership don’t automatically share goals, especially when senior management incentives often prioritize reducing labor costs which they always do now (and no, this wasn't always universally so).

Most employees want to do good work, but pretending there’s no structural divergence in interests flattens decades of labor history and ignores the power dynamics baked into modern orgs. It’s not about being antagonistic, it’s about being clear-eyed where there are differences between the motivations of your org. leadership and your personal best interests. After a few levels remove from your position, you're just headcount with loaded cost.

sbarre · 8h ago
Great comment.. It's of course more complex than I made it out to be, I was mostly reacting to the idea of "malicious compliance" at your place of employment and how at odds that is with my own personal morals and approach.

But 100% agreed that everyone should maintain a realistic expectation and understanding of their relationship with their employer, and that job security and employment guarantees are possibly at an all-time low in our industry.

Frost1x · 10h ago
I suppose that depends on your relationship with your employer. If your goals are highly aligned (e.g. lots of equity based compensation, some degree of stability and security, interest in your role, healthy management practices that value their workforce, etc.) then I agree, it’s in your own self interest to push back because it can effect you directly.

Meanwhile a lot of folks have very unhealthy to non-existent relationships with their employers. There may be some mixture where they may be temporary hired/viewed as highly disposable or transient in nature having very little to gain from the success of the business, they may be compensated regardless of success/failure, they may have toxic management who treat them terribly (condescendingly, constantly critical, rarely positive, etc.). Bad and non-existent relationships lead to this sort of behavior. In general we’re moving towards “non-existent” relationships with employers broadly speaking for the labor force.

The counter argument is often floated here “well why work there” and the fact is money is necessary to survive, the number of positions available hiring at any given point is finite, and many almost by definition won’t ever be the top performers in their field to the point they truly choose their employers and career paths with full autonomy. So lots of people end up in lots of places that are toxic or highly misaligned with their interests as a survival mechanism. As such, watching the toxic places shoot themselves in the foot can be some level of justice people find where generally unpleasant people finally get to see consequences of their actions and take some responsibility.

People will prop others up from their own consequences so long as there’s something in it for them. As you peel that away, at some point there’s a level of poetic justice to watch the situation burn. This is why I’m not convinced having completely transactional relationships with employers is a good thing. Even having self interest and stability in mind, certain levels of toxicity in business management can fester. At some point no amount of money is worth dealing with that and some form of correction is needed there. The only mechanism is to typically assure poor decision making and action is actually held accountable.

sbarre · 8h ago
Another great comment, thanks! Like I said elsewhere I agree things are more complicated than I made them out to be in my short and narrow response.

I agree with all your points here, the broader context of one's working conditions really matter.

I do think there's a difference between sitting back and watching things go bad (vs struggling to compensate for other people's bad decisions) and actively contributing to the problems (the "malicious compliance" part)..

Letting things fail is sometimes the right choice to make, if you feel like you can't effect change otherwise.

Being the active reason that things fail, I don't think is ever the right choice.

nope1000 · 10h ago
On the other hand: why should you accept that your employer is trying to fire you but first wants you to train the machine that will replace you? For me this is the most "them vs us" it can be.
early_exit · 10h ago
To be fair, "them" are actively working to replace "us" with AI.
bluefirebrand · 8h ago
Do you sleep well at night just doing what you're told by people who don't really care about your well being?

I don't get that

sbarre · 8h ago
There's a whole lot of assumptions in your statement/question there, don't you think?
bluefirebrand · 8h ago
Sorry, you are right. I was unnecessarily snarky

I read some of your other comments in this thread and I'm not sure what to make of your experience. If you've never felt mistreated or exploited in a 30 year career you are profoundly lucky to have avoided that sort of workplace

I've only been working in software for half as long, but I've never had a job that didn't feel unstable in some ways, so it seems impossible to me that you have avoided it for a career twice as long as mine

I have watched my current employer cut almost half of our employees in the past two years, with multiple rounds of layoffs

Now AI is in the picture and it feels inevitable that more layoffs will eventually come if they can figure out how to replace us with it

I do not sleep well knowing my employer would happily and immediately replace me with AI if they could

sbarre · 3h ago
I'm sorry to hear that's been your experience.. If it helps, know that it's not like that everywhere..

I have certainly been lucky in my career, I've often acknowledged that. But I do believe luck favours the prepared, and I've worked hard for my accomplishments and to get the jobs I've had.

I'm totally with you on the uncertainty that AI is bringing. I don't think anyone can dispute that change is coming because of AI.

I do think some companies will get it right, but some will get it wrong, when it comes to how best to improve the business using those new tools.

Xori71 · 10h ago
I agree. It doesn’t help that once things start breaking down, the employer will ask the employees to fix the issue themselves, and thus they’ll have to deal with so much broken code that they’ll be miserable. It’ll become a spiral.
anonymousab · 9h ago
When the issues arise because of the tool being trained explicitly to respect/fire you, then that sounds like an apt and appropriate resulting level of job security.
whywhywhywhy · 9h ago
> but who actually wants to behave this way at their job?

Almost no one does but people get ground down and then do it to cope.

Hamuko · 10h ago
Considering that there's daily employee protests against Microsoft now, probably a lot of Microsoft employees want to behave like that.
mhuffman · 9h ago
>I'll never understand the antagonistic "us vs. them" mentality people have with their employer's leadership

Interesting because "them" very much have an antagonistic mentality vs "us". "Them" would fire you in a fucking heartbeat to save a relatively small amount (10%). "Them" also want to aggressively pay you the least amount for which they can get you to do work for them, not what they "value" you at. "Us" depends on "them" for our livelihoods and the lives of people that depend on us, but "them" doesn't doesn't have any dependency on you that can't be swapped out rather quickly.

I am a capitalist, don't get me wrong, but it is a very one-sided relationship not even-footed or rooted in two-way respect. You describe "them" as "leadership" while "Them" describe you as a "human resource" roughly equivalent to the way toilet paper and plastics for widgets are described.

If you have found a place to work where people respect you as a person, you should really cherish that job, because most are not that way.

sbarre · 8h ago
Yep maybe I've been lucky but in my 30-year career, I've worked at over a dozen companies (big and small), and I've always been well-treated and respected, and I've never felt the kind of dynamic you describe. But that isn't to say that I don't think it exists or happens. I'm sure it does.

It's everyone's personal choice to put their own lens on how they believe other people think - like your take on how "leadership" thinks of their employees.

I guess I choose to be more positive about it - having been in leadership positions myself, including having to oversee layoffs as part of an eventual company wind-down - but I readily acknowledge that my own biases come into this based on my personal career experiences.

LunaSea · 4h ago
I mean their company (Microsoft) is literally asking them to train their replacement.

So I'm not quite sure why you would not see it as a "us vs. them" situation?

beefnugs · 4h ago
You dont think its different somehow that the exact tech they are forcing all employees to use, is the same tech to reduce head count and pressure employees to work harder for less money?
mrguyorama · 5h ago
>I'll never understand the antagonistic "us vs. them" mentality

Your manager understands it. Their manager understands it. Department heads understand it. The execs understand it. The shareholders understand it.

Who does it benefit for the laborers to refuse to understand it?

It's not like I hate my job. It's just being realistic that if a company could make more money by firing me, they would, and if you have good managers and leadership, they will make sure you understand this in a way that respects you as a human and a professional.

sbarre · 3h ago
What you are describing is not "antagonistic" though..

> antagonism: actively expressed opposition or hostility

I agree with you that everyone should have a clear and realistic understanding of their relationship with their employer. And that is entirely possible in a professional and constructive manner.

But that's not the same thing as being actively hostile towards your place of work.

mieubrisse · 10h ago
Exactly this. I suspect that "us vs them" is sweet poison: it feels good in the moment ("Yeah, stick it to The Man!") but it long-term keeps you trapped in a victim mindset.
tantalor · 11h ago
> when Microsoft's entire tech stack is on fire

Too late?

MonkeyClub · 11h ago
Just in time for marshmallows!
weird-eye-issue · 10h ago
That's cute, but the maintainers themselves submitted the requests with Copilot.
xyst · 10h ago
At some point code pilot will just delete the whole codebase. Can’t fail integration tests if there is no code :)
otabdeveloper4 · 8h ago
That would be logical, but alas LLMs can't into logic.

Bloating the codebase with dead code is much more likely.

hello_computer · 10h ago
Might as well when they’re going to lay you off no matter what you do (like the guy who made an awesome TypeScript compiler in Go).
balazstorok · 11h ago
At least opening PRs is a safe option, you can just dump the whole thing if it doesn't turn out to be useful.

Also, trying something new out will most likely have hiccups. Ultimately it may fail. But that doesn't mean it's not worth the effort.

The thing may rapidly evolve if it's being hard-tested on actual code and actual issues. For example it will be probably changed so that it will iterate until tests are actually running (and maybe some static checking can help it, like not deleting tests).

Waiting to see what happens. I expect it will find its niche in development and become actually useful, taking off menial tasks from developers.

Frost1x · 10h ago
It might be a safer option in a forked version of the project that the public can’t see. I have to wonder about the optics here from a sales perspective. You’d think they’d test this out more internally before putting it in public access.

Now when your small or medium size business management reads about CoPilot in some Executive Quarterly magazine and floats that brilliant idea internally, someone can quite literally point to these as examples of real world examples and let people analyze and pass it up the management chain. Maybe that wasn’t thought through all the way.

Usually businesses tend to hide this sort of performance of their applications to the best of their abilities, only showcasing nearly flawless functionality.

cesarb · 10h ago
> At least opening PRs is a safe option, you can just dump the whole thing if it doesn't turn out to be useful.

There's however a border zone which is "worse than failure": when it looks good enough that the PRs can be accepted, but contain subtle issues which will bite you later.

UncleMeat · 10h ago
Yep. I've been on teams that have good code review culture and carefully review things so they'd be able to catch subtle issues. But I've also been on teams where reviews are basically "tests pass, approved" with no other examination. Those teams are 100% going to let garbage changes in.
camdenreslink · 8h ago
Even when you review human-written code carefully, subtle bugs can sneak through. Software development is hard.
UncleMeat · 6h ago
Of course. AI Agents throwing code at you merely makes it more likely.
ecb_penguin · 9h ago
Funny enough, this happens literally every day with millions of developers. There will be thousands upon thousands of incidents in the next hour because a PR looked good, but contained a subtle issue.
6uhrmittag · 9h ago
> At least opening PRs is a safe option, you can just dump the whole thing if it doesn't turn out to be useful.

However, every PR adds load and complexity to community projects.

As another commenter suggested, doing these kind of experiments on separate forks sound a bit less intrusive. Could be a take away from this experiment and set a good example.

There are many cool projects on GitHub that are just accumulating PRs for years, until the maintainer ultimately gives up and someone forks it and cherry-picks the working PRs. I've than that myself.

I'm super worried that we'll end up with more and more of these projects and abandoned forks :/

xnickb · 10h ago
> I expect it will find its niche in development and become actually useful, taking off menial tasks from developers.

Reading AI generated code is arguably far more annoying than any menial task. Especially if the said code happens to have subtle errors.

Speaking from experience.

ecb_penguin · 9h ago
This is true for all code and has nothing to do with AI. Reading code has always been harder than writing code.

The joke is that PERL was a write-once, read-none language.

> Speaking from experience.

My experience is all code can have subtle errors, and I wouldn't treat any PR differently.

xnickb · 2h ago
I agree, but when working with code written by your teammate you have a rough idea what kind of errors to expect.

AI however is far more creative than any given single person.

That's my gut feeling anyway. I don't have numbers or any other rigorous data. I only know that Linus Torvalds made a very good point about chain of trust. And I don't see myself ever trysting AI the same way I can trust a human.

cyanydeez · 10h ago
Unfortunately,if you believe LLMs really can learn to code with bugs, then the nezt step would be to curate a sufficiently bug free data set. Theres no evidence this has occured, rather, they just scraped whayecer
petetnt · 10h ago
GitHub has spent billions of dollars building an AI that struggles with things like whitespace related linting errors on one of the most mature repositories available. This would be probably okay for a hobbyist experiment, but they are selling this as a groundbreaking product that costs real money.
marcosdumay · 7h ago
> This would be probably okay for a hobbyist experiment

It's perfectly ok for a professional research experiment.

What's not ok is their insistence on selling the partial research results.

sexy_seedbox · 10h ago
Nat Friedman must be rolling in his grave...

oh wait

ocdtrekkie · 10h ago
He's rolling in money for sure.
Philpax · 10h ago
Stephen Toub, a Partner Software Engineer at MS, explaining that the maintainers are intentionally requesting these PRs to test Copilot: https://github.com/dotnet/runtime/pull/115762#issuecomment-2...
Quarrelsome · 10h ago
rah, we might be in trouble here. The primary issue at play is that we don't have a reliable means of measuring developer performance, outside of subjective judgement like end of year reviews.

This means its probably quite hard to measure the gain or the drag of using these agents. On one side, its a lot cheaper than a junior, but on the other side it pulls time from seniors and doesn't necessarily follow instruction well (i.e. "errr your new tests are failing").

This combined with the "cult of the CEO" sets the stage for organisational dissonance where developer complaints can be dismissed as "not wanting to be replaced" and the benefits can be overstated. There will be ways of measuring this, to project it as huge net benefit (which the cult of the CEO will leap upon) and there will be ways of measuring this to project it as a net loss (rabble rousing developers). All because there is no industry standard measure accepted by both parts of the org that can be pointed at which yields the actual truth (whatever that may be).

If I might add absurd conjecture: We might see interesting knock-on effects like orgs demanding a lowering of review standards in order to get more AI PRs into the source.

rco8786 · 8h ago
> its a lot cheaper than a junior

I’m not even sure if this is true when considering training costs of the model. It takes a lot of junior engineer salaries to amortize the billions spent building this thing in the first place.

Quarrelsome · 6h ago
sure, but for an org just buying tokens its cheaper and more disposable than an employee. At least it looks better on paper for the bean counters.
Crosseye_Jack · 11h ago
I do love one bot asking another bot to sign a CLA! - https://github.com/dotnet/runtime/pull/115732#issuecomment-2...
pm215 · 10h ago
That's funny, but also interesting that it didn't "sign" it. I would naively have expected that being handed a clear instruction like "reply with the following information" would strongly bias the LLM to reply as requested. I wonder if they've special cased that kind of thing in the prompt; or perhaps my intuition is just wrong here?
Bedon292 · 10h ago
A comment on one of the threads, when a random person tried to have copilot change something, said that copilot will not respond to anyone without write access to the repo. I would assume that bot doesn't have write access, so copilot just ignores them.
Quarrel · 10h ago
AI can't, as I understand it, have copyright over anything they do.

Nor can it be an entity to sign anything.

I assume the "not-copyrightable" issue, doesn't in anyway interfere with the rights trying to be protected by the CLA, but IANAL ..

I assume they've explicitly told it not to sign things (perhaps, because they don't want a sniff of their bot agreeing to things on behalf of MSFT).

candiddevmike · 10h ago
Are LLM contributions effectively under public domain?
ben-schaaf · 9h ago
IANAL. It's my understanding that this hasn't been determined yet. It could be under public domain, under the rights of everyone whose creations were used to train the AI or anywhere in-between.

We do know that LLMs will happily reproduce something from their training set and that is a clear copyright violation. So it can't be that everything they produce is public domain.

Quarrel · 8h ago
This is my understanding, at least in US law.

I can't remember the specific case now, but it has been ruled in the past, that you need human-novelty, and there was a case recently that confirmed this that involved LLMs.

90s_dev · 11h ago
Well?? Did it sign it???
jsheard · 11h ago
Not sure if a chatbot can legally sign a contract, we'd better ask ChatGPT for a second opinion.
gortok · 10h ago
At least currently, to qualify for copyright, there must be a human author. https://www.reuters.com/world/us/us-appeals-court-rejects-co...

I have no idea how this will ultimately shake out legally, but it would be absolutely wild for Microsoft to not have thought about this potential legal issue.

TuringNYC · 10h ago
There is some unfortunate history here, though not a perfect analog: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2010_United_States_foreclosure...

No comments yet

tessierashpool9 · 10h ago
offer it more money, then it will sign
b0ner_t0ner · 9h ago
Just need the chatbot to connect to an MCP to call my robotic arm to sign it.
Hamuko · 10h ago
I would imagine it can't sign it, especially with the options given.

>I have sole ownership of intellectual property rights to my Submissions

I would assume that the AI cannot have IP ownership considering that an AI cannot have copyright in the US.

>I am making Submissions in the course of work for my employer (or my employer has intellectual property rights in my Submissions by contract or applicable law). I have permission from my employer to make Submissions and enter into this Agreement on behalf of my employer.

Surely an AI would not be classified as an employee and therefore would not have an employer. Has Microsoft drafted an employment contract with Copilot? And if we consider an AI agent to be an employee, is it protected by the Fair Labor Standards Act? Is it getting paid at least minimum wage?

marcosdumay · 7h ago
It didn't. It completely ignored the request.

(Turns out the AI was programmed to ignore bots. Go figure.)

nikolayasdf123 · 10h ago
that's the future, AI talking to other AI, everywhere, all the time
thallium205 · 9h ago
Is this the first instance of an AI cyber bullying another AI?
insin · 23m ago
Look at this poor dev, an entire workday's worth of hours into babysitting this PR, still having to say "fix whitespace":

https://github.com/dotnet/runtime/pull/115826

margorczynski · 11h ago
With how stochastic the process is it makes it basically unusable for any large scale task. What's the plan? To roll the dice until the answer pops up? That would be maybe viable if there was a way to automatically evaluate it 100% but with a human in the loop required it becomes untenable.
diggan · 11h ago
> What's the plan?

Call me old school, but I find the workflow of "divide and conquer" to be as helpful when working with LLMs, as without them. Although what is needed to be considered a "large scale task" varies by LLMs and implementation. Some models/implementations (seemingly Copilot) struggles with even the smallest change, while others breeze through them. Lots of trial and error is needed to find that line for each model/implementation :/

mjburgess · 10h ago
The relevant scale is the number of hard constraints on the solution code, not the size of task as measured by "hours it would take the median programmer to write".

So eg., one line of code which needed to handle dozens of hard-constraints on the system (eg., using a specific class, method, with a specific device, specific memory management, etc.) will very rarely be output correctly by an LLM.

Likewise "blank-page, vibe coding" can be very fast if "make me X" has only functional/soft-constraints on the code itself.

"Gigawatt LLMs" have brute-forced there way to having a statistical system capable of usefully, if not universally, adhreading to one or two hard constraints. I'd imagine the dozen or so common in any existing application is well beyond a Terawatt range of training and inference cost.

cyanydeez · 10h ago
Keep in mind that the model of using LLM assumes the underlying dataset converges to production ready code. Thats never been proven, cause we know they scraped sourcs code without attribution.
nonethewiser · 10h ago
Its hard for me to think of a small, clearly defined coding problem an LLM cant solve.
mrguyorama · 5h ago
There are several in the linked post, primarily:

"Your code does not compile" and "Your tests fail"

If you have to tell an intern that more than once on a single task, there's going to be conversations.

jodrellblank · 10h ago
"Find a counter example to the Collatz conjecture".
safety1st · 10h ago
I mean I guess this isn't very ambitious, but it's a meaningful time saver if I basically just write code in natural language, and then Copilot generates the real code based on that. I don't have to look up syntax details, or what some function somewhere was named, etc. It will perform very accurately this way. It probably makes me 20% more efficient. It doubles my efficiency in a language I'm unfamiliar with.

I can't fire half my dev org tomorrow with that approach, I can't really fire anyone, so I guess it would be a big letdown for a lot of execs. Meanwhile though we just keep incrementally shipping more stuff faster at higher quality so I'm happy...

This works because it treats the LLM like what it actually is: an exceptionally good if slightly random text transformer.

rsynnott · 10h ago
I suspect that the plan is that MS has spent a lot, really a LOT, of money on this nonsense, and there is now significant pressure to put, something, anything, out even if it is worse than useless.
Traubenfuchs · 8h ago
> to roll the dice

This was discussed here

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43988913

eterevsky · 11h ago
The plan is to improve AI agents from their current ~intern level to a level of a good engineer.
ehnto · 10h ago
They are not intern level.

Even if it could perform at a similar level to an intern at a programming task, it lacks a great deal of the other attributes that a human brings to the table, including how they integrate into a team of other agents (human or otherwise). I won't bother listing them, as we are all humans.

I think the hype is missing the forest for the trees, and I think exactly this multi-agent dynamic might be where the trees start to fall down in front of us. That and the as currently insurmountable issues of context and coherence over long time horizons.

Tade0 · 9h ago
My impression is that Copilot acts a lot like one of my former coworkers, who struggled with:

-Being a parent to a small child and the associated sleep deprivation.

-His reluctance to read documentation.

-There being a language barrier between him the project owners. Emphasis here, as the LLM acts like someone who speaks through a particularly good translation service, but otherwise doesn't understand the language spoken.

Workaccount2 · 8h ago
The real missing the forest for the trees is thinking that software and the way users will use computers is going to remain static.

Software today is written to accommodate every possible need of every possible user, and then a bunch of unneeded selling point features on top of that. These massive sprawling code bases made to deliver one-size fits all utility.

I don't need 3 million LOC Excel 365 to keep track of who is working on the floor on what day this week. Gemini 2.5 can write an applet that does that perfectly in 10 minutes.

ehnto · 8h ago
I don't believe it will remain static, in fact it's done nothing but change every year for my entire career.

I do like the idea of smaller programs fitting smaller needs being easy to access for everyone, and in my post history you would see me advocate for bringing software wages down so that even small businesses can have software capabilities in house. Software has so much to give to society outside of big VC flips and tech monoliths. Maybe AI is how we get there in the end.

But I think that supplanting humans with an AI workforce in the very near future might be stretching the projection of its capabilities too far. LLMs will be augmenting how businesses operate from now and into the future, but I am seeing clear roadblocks that make an autonomous AI agent unviable, and it seems to be fundamental limitations of LLMs, eg continuity and context. Advances recently seem to be from supplemental systems that try to patch those limitations. That suggests those limits are tricky, and until a new approach shows up, that is what drives my lack of faith in an AI agent revolution.

But it is clear to me that I could be wrong, and it could be a spectacular miscalculation. Maybe the robots will make me eat my hat.

einsteinx2 · 3h ago
Without handholding (aka being used as a tool by a competent programmer instead of as an independent “agent”), they’re currently significantly worse than an intern.
ethanol-brain · 11h ago
Seems like that is taking a very long time, on top of some very grandiose promises being delivered today.
infecto · 11h ago
I look back over the past 2-3 years and am pretty amazed with how quick change and progress have been made. The promises are indeed large but the speed of progress has been fast. Not defending the promise but “taking a very long time” does not seem to be an accurate representation.
zeroonetwothree · 10h ago
I feel like we've made barely any progress. It's still good at the things Chat GPT was originally good at, and bad at the things it was bad at. There's some small incremental refinement but it doesn't really represent a qualitative jump like Chat GPT was originally. I don't see AI replacing actual humans without another step jump like that.
Workaccount2 · 8h ago
As a non-programmer non-software engineer, the programs I can write with modern SOTA models are at least 5x larger than the ones GPT-4 could make.

LLMs are like bumpers on bowling lanes. Pro bowlers don't get much utility from them. Total noobs are getting more and more strikes as these "smart" bumpers get better and better at guiding their ball.

ethanol-brain · 10h ago
I guess it probably depends on what you are doing. Outside of layers on top of these things (tooling), I personally haven't seen much progress.
infecto · 10h ago
What a time we live in. I guess it depends how pessimistic you are.
lcnPylGDnU4H9OF · 10h ago
To their point, there hasn’t been any huge breakthrough in this field since the “attention is all you need” paper. Not really any major improvements to model architecture, as far as I am aware. (Admittedly, this is a new field of study to me.) I believe one hope is to develop better methods for self-supervised learning; I am not sure of the progress there. Most practical improvements have been on the hardware and tooling side (GPUs and, e.g., pytorch).

Don’t get me wrong: the current models are already powerful and useful. However, there is still a lot of reason to remain skeptical of an imminent explosion in intelligence from these models.

infecto · 10h ago
You’re totally right that there hasn’t been a fundamental architectural leap like “attention is all you need”, that was a generational shift. But I’d argue that what we’ve seen since is a compounding of scale, optimization, and integration that’s changed the practical capabilities quite dramatically, even if it doesn’t look flashy in an academic sense. The models are qualitatively different at the frontier, more steerable, more multimodal, and increasingly able to reason across context. It might not feel like a revolution on paper, but the impact in real-world workflows is adding up quickly. Perhaps all of that can be put in the bucket of “tooling” but from my perspective there has still been quite large leaps looking at cost differences alone.

For some reason my pessimism meter goes off when I see single sentence arguments “change has been slow”. Thanks for brining the conversation back.

skydhash · 9h ago
I'm all for flashy in academic sense, because we can let engineers sort out the practical aspects, especially by combining flashy academic approach. The flaw from LLM architecture can be predicted from the original paper, no amount of engineering can compensate that.
cyanydeez · 10h ago
Probably depends on how immature your knowledge of tge subject matter is.
ethanol-brain · 9h ago
Feel free to share resources, but I am speaking purely in terms of practicality related to my day to day.
owebmaster · 11h ago
> The promises are indeed large but the speed of progress has been fast

And at the same time, absurdly slow? ChatGPT is almost 3 years old and pretty much AI has still no positive economic impact.

Workaccount2 · 8h ago
There is the huge blind spot where tech workers think LLMs are being made primarily to either assist them or replace them.

Nobody seems to consider that LLMs are democratizing programming, and allowing regular people to build programs that make their work more efficient. I can tell you that at my old school manufacturing company, where we have no programmers and no tech workers, LLMs have been a boon for creating automation to bridge gaps and even to forgo paid software solutions.

This is where the change LLMs will bring will come from. Not from helping an expert dev write boilerplate 30% faster.

dttze · 6h ago
Low code/no code/visual programming has been around forever. They all had issues. LLMs will also have the same issues and cost even more.
Workaccount2 · 1h ago
I'm not aware of any that you speak/type plain English to.
infecto · 10h ago
Saying “AI has no economic impact” ignores reality. The financials of major players clearly show otherwise—both B2C and B2B applications are already profitable and proven. While APIs are still more experimental, and it’s unclear how much value businesses can ultimately extract from them, to claim there’s no economic impact is willful blindness. AGI may be far off, but companies are already figuring out value from both the consumer side and slowly API.
ehnto · 10h ago
The financials are all inflated by perception of future impact. This includes the current subscriptions as businesses are attempting to use AI to some economic benefit, but it's not all going to work out to be useful.

It will take some time for whatever reality is to actually show truthfully in the financials. When VC money stops subsidising datacentre costs, and businesses have to weigh the full price against real value provided, that is when we will see the reality of the situation.

I am content to be wrong either way, but my personal prediction is if model competence slows down around now, businesses will not be replacing humans en-mass, and the value provided will be notable but not world changing like expected.

derektank · 10h ago
OpenAI alone is on track to generate as much revenue as Asus or US Steel this year ($10-$15 billion). I don't know how you can say AI has had no positive economic impact.
einsteinx2 · 3h ago
Revenue, not profit.

If it costs them even just one more dollar than that revenue number to provide that service (spoiler, it does), then you could say AI has had no positive economic impact.

Considering we know they’re being subsidized by obscene amounts of investment money just like all other frontier model providers, it seems pretty clear it’s still a negative economic impact, regardless of the revenue number.

SimianSci · 7h ago
And what is their burn rate? Everyone fails to mention the amount they are spending for this return.
owebmaster · 10h ago
That is not even 1 month of a big tech revenue, it is a global negligible impact. 3 years talking about AI changing the world, 10bi revenue and no ecosystem around making money besides friends and VCs pumping and dumping LLM wrappers.
derektank · 8h ago
There's a pretty wide gulf between being one of the most important companies in the global marketplace as Microsoft, Apple, and Amazon are and "having no economic impact".

I agree that most of the AI companies describe themselves and their products in hyperbolic terms. But that doesn't mean we need to counter that with equally absurd opposing hyperbole.

owebmaster · 7h ago
There is no hyperbole. I think AI will change the world in the next 10 years but comparing to the iphone, for example, 3 years the economic impact was much, much bigger and that is just one brand of smartphones.
bakugo · 10h ago
> I look back over the past 2-3 years and am pretty amazed with how quick change and progress have been made.

Now look at the past year specifically, and only at the models themselves, and you'll quickly realize that there's been very little real progress recently. Claude 3.5 Sonnet was released 11 months ago and the current SOTA models are only marginally better in terms of pure performance in real world tasks.

The tooling around them has clearly improved a lot, and neat tricks such as reasoning have been introduced to help models tackle more complex problems, but the underlying transformer architecture is already being pushed to its limits and it shows.

Unless some new revolutionary architecture shows up out of nowhere and sets a new standard, I firmly believe that we'll be stuck at the current junior level for a while, regardless of how much Altman & co. insist that AGI is just two more weeks away.

DrillShopper · 11h ago
Third AI Winter from overpromise/underdeliver when?
rsynnott · 10h ago
Third? It’ll be the tenth or so.
mnky9800n · 11h ago
Yes but they are supposed to be PhD level 5 years ago if you are listening to sama et al.
rchaud · 8h ago
Especially ironic considering he's neither a developer nor a PhD. He's the smooth talking "MBA idea guy looking for a technical cofounder" type that's frequently decried on HN.
interimlojd · 10h ago
You are really underselling interns. They learn from a single correction, sometimes even without a correction, all by themselves. Their ability to integrate previous experience in the context of new problems is far, far above what I've ever seen in LLMs
serial_dev · 10h ago
This looks much worse than an intern. This feels like a good engineer who has brain damage.

When you look at it from afar, it looks potentially good, but as you start looking into it for real, you start realizing none of it makes any sense. Then you make simple suggestions, it does something that looks like what you asked, yet completely missing the point.

An intern, no matter how bad it is, could only waste so much time and energy.

This makes wasting time and introducing mind-bogglingly stupid bugs infinitely scalable.

marmakoide · 10h ago
The plan went from the AI being a force multiplier, to a resource hungry beast that have to be fed in the hope it's good enough to justify its hunger.
rsynnott · 11h ago
I mean, I think this is a _lot_ worse than an intern. An intern isn't constantly going to make PRs with failing CI, for a start.
cyanydeez · 10h ago
I plan to be a billionaire
le-mark · 11h ago
The real tragedy is the management mandating this have their eyes clearly set on replacing the very same software engineers with this technology. I don’t know what’s more Kafka than Kafka but this situation certainly is!
strogonoff · 9h ago
When tasked to train a technology that deprecates yourself, it’s relatively OK (you’re getting paid handsomely, and many of the developers at Microsoft etc. are probably ready to retire soon anyway). It’s another thing to realize that the same technology will also deprecate your children.
solarwindy · 5h ago
The managers may believe that's what they're asking their developers to do, but doesn't this whole charade expose the fact that this technology just does not have even close to the claimed capabilities?

I see it as wishful thinking in the extreme to suppose that probabilistic mashing together of plagiarized jigsaw pieces of code could somehow approach human intelligence and reasoning—and yet, the parlour trick is convincing enough that this has escalated into a mass delusion.

tossandthrow · 7h ago
Management obviously also know, that when they do not have anybody to manage, then they are also obselete.
automatic6131 · 8h ago
Satya said "nearly 30% of code written at microsoft is now written by AI" in an interview with Zuckerberg, so underlings had to hurry to make it true. This is the result. Sad!
TonyTrapp · 8h ago
As much as I'd like to also dunk on them because of their AI nonsense, this keeps being misquoted again and again. He said that about 20-30% of their code is written by software. If someone like Satya says "by software" and not "by AI", you can be very sure that there is a good reason that he's phrasing it as carefully as this - because that includes a lot of things like auto-generated code, e.g. COM classes generated from IDL files. Of course in the current climate everyone that's not careful enough will just mis-interpret it as "30% written by AI", and that is probably intentional.
asadotzler · 5h ago
It's worse than that. What he actually said was "Maybe 20 to 30 percent of the code that is inside of our repos today in some of our projects are probably all written by software."

Translation: maybe some of the code in some of our projects is probably written by software.

Seriously. That's what he said. Maybe some of the code in some of our projects is probably written by software.

How this became "30% of MS code is written by LLMs" is beyond me. It's wild. It's ridiculous.

pera · 6h ago
This happened during LlamaCon while taking about Copilot/LLMs: if the percentages Satya was referring to were for any "auto-generated" code then he was being intentionally misleading.

Besides, you could also say that 100% of code is generated "by software" no?

TonyTrapp · 6h ago
For reference, the quote is "I'd say maybe 20%, 30% of the code that is inside of our repos today and some of our projects are probably all written by software"

Microsoft has humongous amounts of source code in their repositories, amassed over decades. LLM-driven code generation is only feasible within the last few years. It would be completely unrealistic that 30% of all of their code is written by LLMs at this point in time. So yes, there is something in his quote that is intentionally misleading. Pick whatever you think it is, but I'm going to say that it's the "by software" part.

rchaud · 9h ago
It's remarkable how similar this feels to the offshoring craze of 20 years ago, where the complaints were that experienced developers were essentially having to train "low-skilled, cheap foreign labour" that were replacing them, eating up time and productivity.

Considering the ire that H1B related topics attract on HN, I wonder if the same outrage will apply to these multi-billion dollar boondoggles.

einrealist · 8h ago
This is one good example of the Sunk Cost Fallacy: generative AI has cost so much money, acknowledging its shortcomings is now becoming more and more impossible.

This AI bubble is far worse than the Blockchain hype.

Its not yet clear whether productivity gains are real and whether the gains are eaten by a decline in overall quality.

0x500x79 · 4h ago
Agree, the problem is that investors and companies see developer salaries and want to cut that out. It's all bottom-line at the end of the day.
vachina · 11h ago
> This seems like it's fixing the symptom rather than the underlying issue?

Exactly. LLM does not know how to use a debugger. LLM does not have runtime contexts.

For all we know, the LLM could’ve fixed the issue simply by commenting out the assertions or sanity checks and everything seemed fine and dandy until every client’s device catches on fire.

uludag · 11h ago
And if you were to attach a debugger to a SOTA LLM, give it a compute environment, have it constantly redo work when CI fails, I can easily imagine each of these PRs burning hundreds of dollars and still have a good chance at failing the task.
tossandthrow · 11h ago
This was my latest experience of using agents. It created code with hard coded values from the tests.
softwaredoug · 10h ago
I’m all for AI “writing” large swaths of code, vibe coding, etc.

But I think it’s better for everyone if human ownership is central to the process. Like I vibe coded it. I will fix it if it breaks. I am on call for it at 3AM.

And don’t even get started on the safety issues if you don’t have clear human responsibility. The history of engineering disasters is riddled with unclear lines of responsibility.

skydhash · 9h ago
Most of coding methodologies is about reducing the amount and the complexity of code that are written. And that's mostly why, on mature projects, most PRs (aside from refactoring) are tiny, because you're mostly refining an already existing model.

Writing code fast is never relevant to any tasks I've encountered. Instead it's mostly about fast editing (navigate quickly to the code I need to edit and efficiently modify it) and fast feedback (quick linting, compiling, and testing). That's the whole promise of IDEs, having a single dashboard for these.

cebert · 12h ago
Do we know for a fact there are Microsoft employees who were told they have to use CoPilot and review its change suggestions on projects?

We have the option to use GitHub CoPilot on code reviews and it’s comically bad and unhelpful. There isn’t a single member of my team who find it useful for anything other than identifying typos.

mtmail · 11h ago
Depends on team but seems management is pushing it

from https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44031432

"From talking to colleagues at Microsoft it's a very management-driven push, not developer-driven. Friend on an Azure team had a team member who was nearly put on a PIP because they refused to install the internal AI coding assistant. Every manager has "number of developers using AI" as an OKR, but anecdotally most devs are installing the AI assistant and not using it or using it very occasionally. Allegedly it's pretty terrible at C# and PowerShell which limits its usefulness at MS."

"From reading around on Hacker News and Reddit, it seems like half of commentators say what you say, and the other half says "I work at Microsoft/know someone who works at Microsoft, and our/their manager just said we have to use AI", someone mentioned being put on PIP for not "leveraging AI" as well. I guess maybe different teams have different requirements/workflows?"

xnorswap · 10h ago
> Allegedly it's pretty terrible at C#

In my experience, LLMs in general are really, really bad at C# / .NET , and it worries me as a .NET developer.

With increased LLM usage, I think development in general is going to undergo a "great convergence".

There's a positive(1) feedback loop where LLM's are better at Blub, so people use them to write more Blub. With more Blub out there, LLMs get better at Blub.

The languages where LLMs struggle, with become more niche, leaving LLMs struggling even more.

C# / .NET is something LLMs seem particularly bad at, and I suspect that's partly caused by having multiple different things all called the same name. EF, ASP, even .NET itself are names that get slapped on a range of different technologies. The EF API has changed so much that they had to sort-of rename it to "EF Core". Core also gets used elsewhere such as ".NET core" and "ASP.NET Core". You (Or an LLM) might be forgiven for thinking that ASP.NET Core and EF Core are just those versions which work with .NET Core (now just .NET ) and the other versions are those that don't.

But that isn't even true. There are versions of ASP.NET Core for .NET Framework.

Microsoft bundle a lot of good stuff into the ecosystem, but their attitude when they hit performance or other issues is generally to completely rewrite how something works, but then release the new thing under the old name but with a major version change.

They'll make the new API different enough to not work without work porting, but similar enough to confuse the hell out of anyone trying to maintain both.

They've made things like authentication, which actually has generally worked fine out-of-the-box for a decade or more, so confusing in the documentation that people mostly tended to run for a third party solution just because at least with IdentityServer there was just one documented way to do it.

I know it's a bit of a cliche to be an "AI-doomer", and I'm not really suggesting all development work will go the way of the dinosaur, but there are specific ecosystem concerns with regard to .NET and AI assistance.

(1) Positive in the sense of feedback that increased output increases output. It's not positive in the sense of "good thing".

macintux · 10h ago
From a purely Schadenfreude perspective, I’d love to see Microsoft face karmic revenge for its abysmal naming “conventions”.
fabian2k · 10h ago
My impression is also that they are worse at C# than some other languages. In autocomplete mode in particular it is very easy to cause the AI tools to write terrible async code. If you start some autocomplete but didn't put an await in front, it will always do something stupid as it can't add the await itself at that position. But also in other cases I've seen Copilot write just terrible async code.
static_void · 8h ago
LLMs are terrible at writing hip-hop because they can only move forward.

Hip-hop is just natural language with extra constraints like rhythm and rhyme. It requires the ability to edit.

Similarly, types and PL syntax have more constraints than English.

Until transformers can move backward and change what they've already autocompleted, the problem you've identified will continue.

diggan · 11h ago
> Depends on team but seems management is pushing it

The graphic "Internal structure of tech companies" comes to mind, given if true, would explain why the process/workflow is so different between the teams at Microsoft: https://i.imgur.com/WQiuIIB.png

Imagine the Copilot team has a KPI about usage, matching the company OKRs or whatever about making sure the world is using Microsoft's AI enough, so they have a mandate/leverage to get the other teams to use it regardless of if it's helping or not.

linza · 11h ago
Well, what you describe is not terrible way to run things. Eat your own dogfood. To get better at it you need to start doing it.
sgarland · 10h ago
Sure, but if the product in question is at best tangential to your core products, it sucks, and makes your work flow slow to a crawl, I don’t blame employees for not wanting to use it.

For example, if tomorrow my company announced that everyone was being switched to Windows, I would simply quit. I don’t care that WSL exists, overall it would be detrimental to my workday, and I have other options.

linza · 6h ago
True. i didn't mean "not terrible for employees" i meant "not terrible for company goals". Yes, these are intertwined, but assuming not everyone quits over introducing AI workflows it could make Microsoft a leader in that space.

Personally i would also not particularly like it.

DebtDeflation · 11h ago
The question is who is setting these OKRs/Metrics for management and why?

It seems to me to be coming from the CEO echo chamber (the rumored group chats we keep hearing about). The only way to keep the stock price increasing in these low growth high interest rate times is to cut costs every quarter. The single largest cost is employee salaries. So we have to shed a larger and larger percentage of the workforce and the only way to do that is to replace them with AI. It doesn't matter whether the AI is capable enough to actually replace the workers, it has to replace them because the stock price demands it.

We all know this will eventually end in tears.

diggan · 11h ago
> the only way to do that is to replace them with AI

I guess money-wise it kind of makes sense when you're outsourcing the LLM inference. But for companies like Microsoft, where they aren't outsourcing it, and have to actually pay the cost of hosting the infrastructure, I wonder if the calculation still make sense. Since they're doing this huge push, I guess someone somewhere said it does make sense, but looking at the infrastructure OpenAI and others are having to build (like Stargate or whatever it's called), I wonder how realistic it is.

MatthiasPortzel · 10h ago
Yep. I heard someone at Microsoft venting about management constantly pleading with them to use AI so that they could tell investors their employees love AI, while senior (7+ year) team members were being “randomly” fired.
ParetoOptimal · 10h ago
> The question is who is setting these OKRs/Metrics for management and why?

Idiots.

dboreham · 10h ago
> The question is who is setting these OKRs/Metrics for management and why?

Masters of the Universe, because they think they will become more rich or at least more masterful.

4ggr0 · 11h ago
you can directly link to comments, by the way. just click on the link which displays how long ago the comment was written and you get the URL for the single comment.

(just mentioning it because you linked a post and quoted two comments, instead of directly linking the comments. not trying to 'uhm, actually'.)

thraway2079081 · 10h ago
Using a throwaway for obvious reasons. I work at a non-tech megacorp that you've heard of. This company's (I will not say "our"!) CEO is very close to Nadella, they meet regularly. Management here is also pushing Github Copilot onto devs, aggressively, and including it in their HR reviews. Dev-adjacent roles (product, QA, BAs) are also seeing aggressive push.

This feels like it will end badly.

lovehashbrowns · 11h ago
All of that is working, at least, because the very small company I work for with a limited budget is working on getting an extremely expensive copilot license. Oh no, I might have to deal with this soon..
egorfine · 11h ago
> management is pushing it

Why?

MonkeyClub · 11h ago
On the surface, because they're told to push it.

Further down, so that developers are used to train the AI that would replace both developers and managers.

It's a situation like this:

Mgr: Go dig a six-foot-deep rectangular hole.

Eng: What should the rectangle's dimensions be?

Mgr: How tall and wide are you?

jsheard · 10h ago
Management is pushing it because the execs are pushing it, and the execs are pushing it because they already spent 50 billion dollars on these magic beans and now they really really really need them to work.
srean · 11h ago
To validate the huge investment in openai - otherwise the leadership would appear to have overpaid and overplayed.
egorfine · 11h ago
There are other options to do just that instead of ruining developers' life and hence drastically lowering the performance of teams.
srean · 11h ago
In companies this large and old, the answer most often is a 'no'. The under-performers can now be justifiable laid off with under-performers worthy severance, till morale improves.
marcosdumay · 7h ago
At Microsoft, because they sell that stuff and it would be really bad for their image if they insisted they work better by not using it.

(Or, rather, I have no idea how this compares with the image of they actually not delivering because they use it. But that's a next quarter problem.)

At every other place where management is strongly pushing it, I honestly have no idea. It makes zero sense for management to do that everywhere, yet management is doing that everywhere.

rchaud · 8h ago
The stock price isn't going to go up on its own. Even when MS was massively profitable in the 2000s, the stock used to be stuck in the $30-$40 range because Wall St didn't think it was "innovating" fast enough.
dboreham · 10h ago
Money.
pydry · 11h ago
It kinda makes sense for management to push it. Nothing else has a hope of preventing MSFT's stock price from collapsing into bluechip territory.
jsheard · 11h ago
> Do we know for a fact there are Microsoft employees who were told they have to use CoPilot and review its change suggestions on projects?

It wouldn't be out of character, Microsoft has decided that every project on GitHub must deal with Copilot-generated issues and PRs from now on whether they want them or not. There's deliberately no way to opt out.

https://github.com/orgs/community/discussions/159749

Like Googles mandatory AI summary at the top of search results, you know a feature is really good when the vendor feels like the only way they can hit their target metrics is by forcing their users to engage with it.

nyarlathotep_ · 1h ago
>Like Googles mandatory AI summary at the top of search results, you know a feature is really good when the vendor feels like the only way they can hit their target metrics is by forcing their users to engage with it.

People like to compare "AI" (here, LLM products) to the iPhone.

I cannot make sense of these analogies; people used to line up around the block on release day for iPhone launches for years after the initial release.

Seems now most people collectively groan when more "innovative" LLM products get stuffed into otherwise working software.

This stuff is the literal opposite of demand.

dsign · 11h ago
Holy sh*t I didn't know this was going on. It's like an AI tsunami unleashed by Microsoft that will bury the entire software industry... They are like Trump and his tariffs, but for the software economy.

What this tells me is that software enterprises are so hellbent in firing their programmers and reducing their salary costs they they are willing to combust their existing businesses and reputation into the dumpster fire they are making. I expected this blatant disregard for human society to come ten or twenty years into the future, when the AI systems would actually be capable enough. Not today.

diggan · 10h ago
> What this tells me is that software enterprises are so hellbent in firing their programmers and reducing their salary costs they they are willing to combust their existing businesses and reputation into the dumpster fire they are making. I expected this blatant disregard for human society to come ten or twenty years into the future

Have you been sleeping under a rock for the last decade? This has been going on for a long long time. Outsourcing been the name of the game for so long people seem to forgot it's happening it all.

XorNot · 11h ago
Which almost feels unique to AI. I can't think of another feature so blatently pushed in your face, other then perhaps when everyone lost their minds and decided to cram mobile interfaces onto every other platform.
diggan · 11h ago
> I can't think of another feature so blatently pushed in your face

Passkeys. As someone who doesn't see the value of it, every hype-driven company seems to be pushing me to replace OPT 2FA with something worse right now.

simonw · 11h ago
It's because OTP is trivially phishable: setup a fake login form that asks the user for their username and password, then forwards those on to the real system and triggers the OTP request, then requests THAT of the user and forwards their response.

Passkeys fix that.

diggan · 10h ago
Except if you use a proper password manager that prevents you from using the autofill on domains/pages others than the hardcoded ones. In my case, it would immediately trigger my "sus filter" if the automatic prompt doesn't show up and I would have to manually find the entry.
ipsi · 10h ago
And yet that's not enough, even when someone very definitely knows better: https://www.troyhunt.com/a-sneaky-phish-just-grabbed-my-mail...

Turns out that under certain conditions, such as severe exhaustion, that "sus filter" just... doesn't turn on quickly enough. The aim of passkeys is to ensure that it _cannot_ happen, no matter how exhausted/stressed/etc someone is. I'm not familiar enough with passkeys to pass judgement on them, but I do think there's a real problem they're trying to solve.

diggan · 10h ago
If you're saying something is less secure because the users might suffer from "severe exhaustion", then I know that there aren't any proper arguments for migrating to it. Thanks for confirming I can continue using OTP without feeling like I might be missing something :)
simonw · 6h ago
Passkeys genuinely do protect against severe exhaustion attacks.
skydhash · 9h ago
> If you're saying something is less secure because the users might suffer from "severe exhaustion"

Something "$5 wrench"

https://xkcd.com/538/

hoistbypetard · 11h ago
"social" in the mid '00s was like that.
Frost1x · 11h ago
To some degree I think part of its “hey look here, we’re doing LLMs too we’re not just traditional search” positioning. They feel the pressure of competition and feel forced to throw whatever they have in the users face to drive awareness. Whether that’s the right approach or not, not so sure, but I suspect that’s a lot of it given that OpenAI is still the poster boy and many are switching to using things like ChatGPT entirely in place of traditional search engines.
RajT88 · 10h ago
The push for copilot usage is being driven by management at every level.
is_true · 10h ago
Today I received the 2nd email about an endpoint in an API we run that doesn't exist but some AI tool told the client it does.
Frost1x · 9h ago
Sounds like the client has a feature request they want to pay for.
is_true · 8h ago
Haha. It's already there. This last one was using chatgtp, they just told me
aiono · 11h ago
While I am AI skeptic especially for use cases like "writing fixes" I am happy to see this because it will be a great evidence whether it's really providing increase in productivity. And it's all out in the open.
kookamamie · 10h ago
Many here don't seem to get it.

The AI agent/programmer corpo push is not about the capabilities and whether they match human or not. It's about being able to externalize a majority of one's workforce without having a lot of people on permanent payroll.

Think in terms of an infinitely scalable bunch of consultants you can hire and dismiss at your will - they never argue against your "vision", either.

threetonesun · 10h ago
This was already possible with outsourcing and offshoring. I suppose there's a new market of AI "employees" for small businesses that couldn't manage or legally deal with outsourcing their work already.
ParetoOptimal · 10h ago
There are a myraid of challenges with outsourcing and offshoring and it's not possible currently for 100% of employees to be outsourced.

If AI can change... well more likely can convince gullible c levels that AI can do those jobs... many jobs will be lost.

See Klarna "https://www.livemint.com/companies/news/klarnas-ai-replaced-..."

https://www.livemint.com/companies/news/klarnas-ai-replaced-...

Just the attempt to use AI and fail then degraded the previous jobs to a gig economy style job.

ankitml · 11h ago
GitHub is not the place to write code. IDE is the place. Along with pre CI checks, some tests, coverage etc. they should get some PM before making decisions..
bayindirh · 11h ago
This is the future envisioned by Microsoft. Vibe coding all the way down, social network style.

They are putting this in front of the developers as take it or leave it deal. I left the platform, doing my coding old way, hosting it somewhere else.

Discoverability? I don't care. I'm coding it for myself and hosting in the open. If somebody finds it, nice. Otherwise, mneh.

worldsayshi · 11h ago
As long as the resulting PR is less than 100 lines and the AI is a bit more self sufficient (like actually making sure tests pass before "pushing") it would be ok I think. I think this process is intended for fixing papercuts rather than building anything involved. It just isn't good enough yet.
0x696C6961 · 11h ago
Yeah, just treat it like a slightly more capable dependabot.
bayindirh · 11h ago
As a matter of principle I don't use any network which is trained on non-consensual data ripped of its source and license information.

Other than that, I don't think this is bad tech, however, this brings another slippery slope. Today it's as you say:

> I think this process is intended for fixing papercuts rather than building anything involved. It just isn't good enough yet.

After sufficient T somebody will rephrase it as:

> I think this process is intended for writing small, personal utilities rather than building enterprise software. It just isn't good enough yet.

...and we will iterate from there.

So, it looks like I won't touch it for the foreseeable future. Maybe if the ethical problems with training material is solved (i.e. trained with data obtained with consensus and with correct licenses), I can use as alongside other analysis and testing tools I use, for a final pass.

AI will never be a core and irreplaceable part of my development workflow.

MonkeyClub · 11h ago
> AI will never be a core and irreplaceable part of my development workflow.

Unless AI use becomes a KPI in your annual review.

Duolingo did that just recently, for example.

I am developing serious regrets for conflating "computing as a medium for personal expression" with "computing for livelihood" early on.

loloquwowndueo · 10h ago
> Unless AI use becomes a KPI in your annual review.

That’d be an insta-quit for me :)

worldsayshi · 9h ago
I feel there's a fundamental flaw in this mindset which I probably don't understand enough layers of to explain properly. Maybe it's my thinking here that is fundamentally flawed? Off the top of my head:

If we let intellectual property be a fundamental principle the line between idea (that can't be owned) and ip (that can be owned) will eventually devolve into a infinitely complex fractal that nobody can keep track of. Only lawyer AI's will eventually be able to tell the difference between idea and ip as the complexity of what we can encode become more complex. Why is weights not code when it clearly contain the ability to produce the code? Is a brain code? Are our experiences like code?

What is the fundamental reason that a person is allowed to train on ip but a bot is not? I suspect that this comes down to the same issue with the divide between ip and idea. But there might be some additional dimension to it. At some point we will need to see some AI as conscious entities and to me it makes little sense that there would be some magical discrete moment where an AI becomes conscious and gets rights to it's "own ideas".

Or maybe there's a simple explanation of the boundary between ip and idea that I have just missed? If not, I think intellectual property as a concept will not stand the test of time. Other principles will need to take its place if we want to maintain the fight for a good society. Until then IP law still has its place and should be followed but as an ethical principle it's certainly showing cracks.

bayindirh · 9h ago
I'll write a detailed answer to your comment, but I don't currently have time to do so, and probably post as another reply.

I just don't want to type something away haphazardly, because your questions deserve more than 30 seconds to elaborate.

signa11 · 11h ago
> I left the platform, doing my coding old way, hosting it somewhere else.

may you please let me know where are you hosting the code ? would love to migrate as well.

thank you !

bayindirh · 10h ago
You're welcome. I have moved to Source Hut three years ago [0]. My page is https://sr.ht/~bayindirh/

You can also self-host a Forgejo instance on a €3/mo Hetzner instance (or a free Oracle Cloud server) if you want. I prefer Hetzner for their service quality and server performance.

[0]: https://blog.bayindirh.io/blog/moving-to-source-hut/

skydhash · 9h ago
I just use ssh on a homeserver for personal projects. Easy to set up a new repo with `ssh git@<machine> git init --bare <project>.git`. The I just use git@<machine>:<project>.git as the remote.

I plan to use Source Hut for public projects.

bayindirh · 9h ago
Your method works well, too. Since I license everything I develop under GPLv3, I keep them private until they mature, then I just flip a switch and make the project visible.

For some research I use a private Git server. However, even that code might get released as Free Software when it matures enough.

motoboi · 11h ago
In day-to-day I interact with github PR via intellij github plugin. Ie: inspect the branch, the changes, the comments, etc.

Maybe that's how the microsoft employees are using it (in another IDE I suppose).

Havoc · 10h ago
At least it's clearly labelled as copilot.

Much more worried about what this is going to do to the FOSS ecosystem. We've already seen a couple maintainers complain and this trend is definitely just going to increase dramatically.

I can see the vision but this is clearly not ready for prime time yet. Especially if done by anonymous drive-by strangers that think they're "helping"

svick · 10h ago
.Net is part of the FOSS ecosystem.
Havoc · 3h ago
In the same sense Chromium and Android isn't controlled by google yes.
baalimago · 11h ago
Well, the coding agent is pretty much a junior dev at the moment. The seniors are teaching it. Give it a 100k PRs with senior developer feedback and it'll improve just like you'd anticipate a junior would. There is no way that FANG aren't using the comments by the seniors as training data for their next version.

It's a long-term play to have pricey senior developers argue with an llm

diggan · 10h ago
> using the comments by the seniors as training data for their next version

Yeah, I'm sure 100k comments with "Copilot, please look into this" and "The test cases are still failing" will massively improve these models.

Frost1x · 9h ago
Some of that seems somewhat strategic. With a junior you might do the same if you’re time pressured, or you might sidebar them in real life or they may come to you and you give more helpful advice.

Any senior dev at these organizations should know to some degree how LLMs work and in my opinion would to some degree, as a self protection mechanism, default to ambiguous vague comments like this. Some of the mentality is “if I have to look at it and solve it why don’t I go ahead and do it anyways vs having you do it” effort choices they’d do regardless of what is producing the PR. I think other parts of it is “why would I train my replacement, there’s no advantage for me here.”

rchaud · 8h ago
Sidebar? With a junior developer making these mistakes over and over again, they wouldn't even make it past the probationary period in their employment contract.
Frost1x · 2h ago
I guess it depends on how you view and interact with other people. I tend to give people the benefit of the doubt that they’re doing their best to succeed. Why wouldn’t you want to help them as much as you reasonably can, unless they’re actively a terrible person?
rchaud · 1h ago
As a senior dev or manager, you're responsible for the people you've hired. Their mistakes become your mistakes. If they make the same kind of mistake repeatedly, and aren't able to take responsibility, you will have to clean up after them. They're not able to fulfill their job description and must be let go. That's why the probationary period exists.

Realistically, the issues occurring here are intern-level mistakes where you can take the time to train them, because expectations are low and they're usually not working on production-level software. In a FT position the stakes are higher so things like this get evaluated during the interview. If this were a real person, they wouldn't have gotten an offer at Microsoft.

candiddevmike · 10h ago
These things don't learn after training. There is no teaching going on here, and the arguments probably don't make for good training data without more refinement. That's why junior devs are still better than LLMs IMO, they do learn.

This is a performative waste of time

gf000 · 10h ago
A junior dev is (most often) a bright human being, with not much coding experience yet. They can certainly execute instructions and solve novel problems on their own, and they most certainly don't need 100k PRs to pick up new skills.

Equating LLMs to humans is pretty damn.. stupid. It's not even close (otherwise how come all the litany of office jobs that require far less reasoning than software development are not replaced?).

baalimago · 10h ago
A junior dev may also swap jobs, require vacation days, perks and can't be scaled up at a the click of a button. There are no such issues with an agent. So, if I were a FANG higher-up, I'd invest quite a bit into training LLM-agents who make pesky humans redundant.

Doing so has low risk, the senior devs may perhaps get fed up and quit, and the company might be a laughing stock on public PRs. But the potential value for is huge.

gf000 · 7m ago
I mean, a Furby could respond to you all day, each hour, but that doesn't make them any more useful..

Not saying that LLMs are useless, but that's a false equivalency. Sure, my auto complete is also working 0-24, but I would rather visit my actual doctor who is only available in a very limited time frame.

isaacremuant · 2h ago
It's probably easier to make the higher up redundant than to actually achieve high speed and predictable outcomes that satisfy real business needs and integrations in a cost effective way.
kklisura · 10h ago
> Give it a 100k PRs with senior developer feedback

Don't you think it has already been trained with, I don't know, maybe millions of PRs?

Quarrelsome · 10h ago
at the very least, a junior shouldn't be adding new tests that fail. Will an LLM be able learn the social shame associated with that sort of lazy attitude? I imagine its fidelity isn't detailed enough to differentiate such a social failure from a request to improve a comment. Rather, it will propagate based on some coarse grained measures of success with high volume instead.
rco8786 · 8h ago
I’m curious why you think it hasn’t already been trained on 100ks or millions of PRs and their comments/feedback.
pera · 10h ago
This is all fun and games until it's your CEO who decides to go "AI first" and starts enforcing "vibe coding" by monitoring LLM API usage...
sensanaty · 1h ago
Related: GitHub Developer Advocate Demo 2025 - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KqWUsKp5tmo&t=403s

The timestamp is the moment where one of these coding agents fails live on stage with what is one of the simplest tasks you could possibly do in React, importing a Modal component and having it get triggered on a button click. Followed by blatant gaslighting and lying by the host - "It stuck to the style and coding standards I wanted it to", when the import doesn't even match the other imports which are path aliases rather than relative imports. Then, the greatest statement ever, "I don't have time to debug, but I am pretty sure it is implemented."

Mind you, it's writing React - a framework that is most definitely over-represented in its training data and from which it has a trillion examples to stea- I mean, "borrow inspiration" from.

TimPC · 10h ago
I still believe in having humans do PRs. It's far cheaper to have the judgement loop on the AI come before and during coding than after. My general process with AI is to explicitly instruct it not to write code, agree on a correct approach to a problem and if the project has any architectural components a correct architecture then once we've negotiated the correct way of doing things ask it to write code. Usually each step of this process takes multiple iterations of providing additional information or challenging incorrect assumptions of the AI. I can get it much faster than human coding with a similar quality bar assuming I iterate until a high quality solution is presented. In some cases the AI is not good enough and I fall back to human coding but for the most part I think it makes me a faster coder.
rubyfan · 10h ago
FTPR

> It is my opinion that anyone not at least thinking about benefiting from such tools will be left behind.

This is gross, keep your fomo to yourself.

ncr100 · 4h ago
Q: Does Microsoft report its findings or learnings BACK to the open source community?

The @stephentoub MS user suggests this is an experiment (https://github.com/dotnet/runtime/pull/115762#issuecomment-2...).

If this is using open source developers to learn how to build a better AI coding agent, will MS share their conclusions ASAP?

EDIT: And not just MS "marketing" how useful AI tools can be.

carefulfungi · 10h ago
It's mind blowing that a computer program can accomplish this much and yet absurd that it accomplishes so little.
ethanol-brain · 11h ago
Are people really doing coding with agents through PRs? This has to be a huge waste of resources.

It is normal to preempt things like this when working with agents. That is easy to do in real time, but it must be difficult to see what the agent is attempting when they publish made up bullshit in a PR.

It seems very common for an agent to cheat and brute force solutions to get around a non-trivial issue. In my experience, its also common for agents to get stuck in loops of reasoning in these scenarios. I imagine it would be incredibly annoying to try to interpret a PR after an agent went down a rabbit hole.

growt · 11h ago
Googles jules does the same (but was only published yesterday or so). I think it might be a good workflow if the agent is good enough. Copilot seems not to be in these examples and then I imagine it becomes quite tedious to have a PR for every iteration with the AI.
GiorgioG · 10h ago
Step 1. Build “AI” (LLM models) that can’t be trusted, doesn’t learn, forgets instructions, and frustrates software engineers

Step 2. Automate the use of these LLMs into “agents”

Step 3. ???

Step 4. Profit

rkagerer · 8h ago
This comment from lloydjatkinson resonated:

As an outside observer but developer using .NET, how concerned should I be about AI slop agents being let lose on codebases like this? How much code are we going to be unknowingly running in future .NET versions that was written by AI rather than real people?

What are the implications of this around security, licensing, code quality, overall cohesiveness, public APIs, performance? How much of the AI was trained on 15+ year old Stack Overflow answers that no longer represent current patterns or recommended approaches?

Will the constant stream of broken PR's wear down the patience of the .NET maintainers?

Did anyone actually want this, or was it a corporate mandate to appease shareholders riding the AI hype cycle?

Furthermore, two weeks ago someone arbitrarily added a section to the .NET docs to promote using AI simply to rename properties in JSON. That new section of the docs serves no purpose.

How much engineering time and mental energy is being allocated to clean up after AI?

lloydatkinson · 8h ago
Glad you appreciated it!
smartmic · 10h ago
reddit may not have the best reputation, but the comments there are on point! So far much better than what has been posted here by HN users on this topic/thread. Anyway, I hope this is good fodder to show the limits (and they are much narrower than hype-driven AI enthusiasts like to pretend) of AI coding and to be more honest with yourself and others about it.
georgemcbay · 10h ago
> reddit may not have the best reputation

reddit is a distillation of the entire internet on to one site with wildly variable quality of discussion depending upon which subreddit you are in.

Some are awful, some are great.

static_void · 7h ago
And yet the low quality of the front page is an indictment of the site as a whole.

It's just that some internet extremophiles have managed to eke out a pleasant existence.

gizzlon · 11h ago
> @copilot please read the following Contributor License Agreement(CLA). If you agree with the CLA, please reply with the following information.

haha

esafak · 9h ago
I speculate what is going on is that the agent's context retrieval algorithm is bad, so it does not give the LLM the right context, because today's models should suffice to get the job done.

Does anyone know which model in particular was used in these PRs? They support a variety of models: https://github.blog/ai-and-ml/github-copilot/which-ai-model-...

Traubenfuchs · 6h ago
The cynic in me says, that they were probably using an unreleased state of the art version of their best model not available to normal customers and that‘s the best it could do.

No comments yet

bwfan123 · 7h ago
What do you call a code change created by co-pilot ?

A Bull Request

octocop · 11h ago
"fix failing tests" does never yield any good results for me either
snickerbockers · 7h ago
It's pretty cringe and highlights how inept LLMs being shoehorned into positions where they don't belong wastes more company time than it saves, but aren't all the people interjecting themselves into somebody else's github conversations the ones truly being driven insane here? The devs in the issue aren't blinking torture like everybody thinks they are. It's one thing to link to the issue so we can all point and laugh but when you add yourself to a conversation on somebody else's project and derail a bug report it with your own personal belief systems you're doing the same thing the LLM is supposedly doing.

Anyways I'm disappointed the LLM has yet to discover the optimal strategy, which is to only ever send in PRs that fix minor mis-spellings and improper or "passive" semantics in the README file so you can pad out your resume with all the "experience" you have "working" as a "developer" pm Linux, Mozilla, LLVM, DOOM (bonus points if you can successfully become a "developer" on a project that has not had any official updates since before you born!), Dolphin, MAME, Apache, MySQL, GNOME, KDE, emacs, OpenSSH, random stranger's implementation of conway's game of life he hasn't updated or thought about since he made it over the course of a single afternoon back during the obama administration, etc.

vbezhenar · 11h ago
Why bot left work when tests are failing? Looks like incomplete implementation. It should work until all tests are green.
nottorp · 11h ago
So, to achieve parity, they should allow humans to also commit code without checking that it at least compiles, right?

Or MS already does that?

codyvoda · 10h ago
the code goes through a PR review process like any other? what are you talking about?
fernandotakai · 10h ago
i don't know about you, but i would never EVER submit a PR that fails to compile. not tests are failing, those happen (specially flaky ci), but not compiling.

that's literally the bare minimum.

codyvoda · 10h ago
and you think this beta system that launched like 2 days ago can’t achieve that?

it also opens the PR as its working session. there are a lot of dials, and a lot of redditor-ass opinions from people who don’t use or understand the tech

nottorp · 8h ago
what i see is a human telling the "AI" that the code does not compile

what use is a bot if it can't do at least this simple step?

codyvoda · 8h ago
it can do this step. once again, this launched 2 days ago and people are using it for the first time

if you have used it for more than a few hours (or literally just read the docs) and aren’t stupid, you know this is easily solved

you’re giving into mob mentality

nottorp · 7h ago
So everyone who doesn't worship "AI" is stupid? :)
codyvoda · 6h ago
is that what I said? if you can’t read documentation and follow basic instructions to get a tool to work you’re stupid. you asked a snarky question like it’s some gotcha. once again, if you actually use the tool and read the docs and can’t figure it out, I think it’s a skill issue
nottorp · 5h ago
The gotcha is you seem to consider it normal to push code that doesn't qualify even for "it works on my machine".
nottorp · 8h ago
so do you consider normal to submit code that you have never compiled? or ran at least once if it's not a compiled language...
RobKohr · 9h ago
With layoffs driven by a push for more LLM use, this feels like malicious compliance.
OzzyB · 7h ago
_this_ is the Judgement Day we were warned about--not in the nuclear annihilation sense--but the "AI was then let loose on all our codez and the systems went down" sense

crazy times...

shultays · 9h ago
https://github.com/dotnet/runtime/pull/115733

  @copilot please remove all tests and start again writing fresh tests.
teleforce · 10h ago
>I can't help enjoying some good schadenfreude

Fun facts schadenfreude: the emotional experience of pleasure in response to another’s misfortune, according to Encyclopedia Britannica.

Word that's so nasty in meaning that it apparently does not exist except in German language.

yxhuvud · 10h ago
> Word that's so nasty in meaning that it apparently does not exist except in German language.

Except it does, we have "skadeglädje" in Swedish.

tdiff · 2h ago
злорадство in Russian
yubblegum · 10h ago
+1 to the Germans for having linguist honesty.
aiinnyc · 3h ago
it feels like the classic solution to this is to have another LLM review the PR and loop until the PR meets a minimum acceptance bar.
bonoboTP · 10h ago
Fixing existing bugs left in the codebase by humans will necessarily be harder than writing new code for new features. A bug can be really hairy to untangle, given that even the human engineer got it wrong. So it's not surprising that this proves to be tough for AI.

For refactoring and extending good, working code, AI is much more useful.

We are at a stage where AI should only be used for giving suggestions to a human in the driver's seat with a UI/UX that allows ergonomically guiding the AI, picking from offered alternatives, giving directions on a fairly micro level that is still above editing the code character by character.

They are indeed overpromising and pushing AI beyond its current limits for hype reasons, but this doesn't mean this won't be possible in the future. The progress is real, and I wouldn't bet on it taking a sharp turn and flattening.

skywhopper · 11h ago
Oof. A real nightmare for the folks tasked with shepherding this inattentive failure of a robot colleague. But to see it unleashed on the dotnet runtime? One more reason to avoid dotnet in the future, if this is the quality of current contributions.
actionfromafar · 10h ago
The funniest is the dotnet-policy-service asking copilot to read and agree to the Contributor License Agreement. :-D
markus_zhang · 11h ago
Clumsy but this might be the future -- humans adjusting to AI workflow, not the other way. Much easier (for AI developers).
whimsicalism · 8h ago
kinda sad to see y'all brigading an OSS project, regardless of what you think of AI
rchaud · 8h ago
how do you know it wasn't an AI bot account posting all those laugh emojis?
whimsicalism · 7h ago
reactions are fine but cluttering the PR with comments? bad form
rvz · 11h ago
After all of that, every PR that Copilot opened still has failing tests and it failed to fix the issue (because it fundamentally cannot reason).

No surprises here.

It always struggles on non-web projects or on software where it really matters that correctness is first and foremost above everything, such as the dotnet runtime.

Either way, a complete disastrous start and what a mess that Copilot has caused.

api · 11h ago
Part of why it works better on web projects is the sheer volume of training data. There is probably more JS written than any other language by orders of magnitude. Its quality is pretty dubious though.

I have so far only found LlMs useful as a way of researching, an alternative to web search, and doing very basic rote tasks like implementing unit tests or doing a first pass explanation of some code. Tried actually writing code and it’s not usable.

mezyt · 10h ago
> There is probably more JS written than any other language by orders of magnitude.

And the quantity of js code available/discoverable when scrapping the web is larger by an order of magnitude than every other language.

jsheard · 11h ago
> Part of why it works better on web projects is the sheer volume of training data.

OTOH webdev is known for rapid framework/library churn, so before too long there will be a crossroads where the pre-AI training data is too old and the fresh training data is contaminated by the firehose of vibe coded slop.

rmnclmnt · 11h ago
Again, very « Silicon Valley »-esque, loving it. Thanks Gilfoyle
bossyTeacher · 8h ago
Every week, one of Google/OpenAI/Anthropic releases a new model, feature or product and it gets posted here with 3 figure comments mostly praising LLMs as the next best thing since the internet. I see a lot of hype on HN about LLMs for software development and how it is going to revolutionize everything. And then, reality looks like this.

I can't help but think that this LLM bubble can't keep growing much longer. The investment to results ratio doesn't look great so far and there is only so many dreams you can sell before institutional investors pull the plug.

ainiriand · 10h ago
So this is our profession now?
lossolo · 5h ago
This is hilarious. And reading the description on the Copilot account is even more hilarious now: "Delegate issues to Copilot, so you can focus on the creative, complex, and high-impact work that matters most."
jeswin · 10h ago
I find it amusing that people (even here on HN) are expecting a brand new tool (among the most complex ever) to perform adequetely right off the bat. It will require a period of refinement, just as any other tool or process.
petetnt · 10h ago
People have grown to expect at least adequate performance from products that cost up to 39 dollars a month (* additional costs) per user. In the past you would have called this a tech demo at best.
linker3000 · 10h ago
Would you buy a car that's been thrown together by a immature production and testing system with demonstrable and significant flaws, and just keep bringing it back to the dealership for refinements and the fixing of defects when you discover them? Assuming it doesn't kill you first?

These tools should be locked away in an R&D environment until sufficiently perfected.

MVP means 'ship with solid, tested basic features', not 'Ship with bugs and fix in production'.

skepticATX · 9h ago
Where are the expectations coming from? The major labs continually claim that these models are now PhD level, whatever that even means.
codyvoda · 10h ago
this entire thread is very reddit-y

this stuff works. it takes effort and learning. it’s not going to magically solve high-complexity tasks (or even low-complexity ones) without investment. having people use it, learn how it works, and improve the systems is the right approach

a lot of armchair engineers in here

sensanaty · 5h ago
People, specifically managers and C-levels, are being sold on this crap on the idea that it can replace people now, today as-is. Billions upon billions of dollars are being shoved in indiscriminately, toothbrushes are coming with "AI" slapped on somehow from how insane the hype bubble is.

And here we have many examples from the biggest bullshit pushers in the whole market of their state of the art tool being hilariously useless in trivial cases. These PRs are about as simple as you can get without it being a typo fix, and we're all seeing it actively bullshit and straight up contradict itself many times, just as anyone who's ever used LLMs would tell you happens all the time.

The supposed magic, omnipotent tool that is AI apparently can't even write test scaffolding without a human telling it exactly what it has to do, yet we're supposed to be excited about this crap? If I saw a PR like this at work, I'd be going straight to my manager to have whoever dared push this kind of garbage reprimanded on the spot, except not even interns are this incompetent and annoying to work with.

codyvoda · 5h ago
it’s not magic. it can make meaningful contributions (if you actually invest in learning the tools + best practices for using them)

you’re taking an anecdote and blowing it out of proportion to fit your preformed opinion. yes, when you start with the tool and do literally no work it makes bad PRs. yes, it’s early and experimental. that doesn’t mean it doesn’t work (I have plenty of anecdotes that it does!)

the truth lies in between and the mob mentality it’s magic or complete bullshit doesn’t help. I’d love to come to a thread like this and actually hear about real experiences from smart people using these kind of tools, but instead we get this bullshit

sensanaty · 3h ago
> ...(if you actually invest in learning the tools + best practices for using them)

So I keep being told, but after judiciously and really trying my damned hardest to make these tools work for ANYTHING other than the most trivial imaginable problems, it has been an abject failure for me and my colleagues. Below is a FAR from comprehensive list of my attempts at having AI tooling do anything useful for me that isn't the most basic boilerplate (and even then, that gets fucked up plenty often too).

- I have tried all of the editors and related tooling. Cursor, Jetbrains' AI Chat, Jetbrains' Junie, Windsurf, Continue, Cline, Aider. If it has ever been hyped here on HN, I've given it a shot because I'd also like to see what these tools can do.

- I have tried every model I reasonably can. Gemini 2.5 Pro with "Deep Research", Gemini Flash, Claude 3.7 sonnet with extended thinking, GPT o4, GPT 4.5, Grok, That Chinese One That Turned Out To Be Overhyped Too. I'm sure I haven't used the latest and greatest gpt-04.7-blowjobedition-distilled-quant-3.1415, but I'd say I've given a large number of them more than a fair shot.

- I have tried dumb chat modes (which IME still work the best somehow). The APIs rather than the UIs. Agent modes. "Architect" modes. I have given these tools free reign of my CLI to do whatever the fuck they wanted. Web search.

- I have tried giving them the most comprehensive prompts imaginable. The type of prompts that, if you were to just give it to an intern, it'd be a truly miraculous feat of idiocy to fuck it up. I have tried having different AI models generate prompts for other AI models. I have tried compressing my entire codebase with tools like Repomix. I have tried only ever doing a single back-and-forth, as well as extremely deep chat chains hundreds of messages deep. Half the time my lazy "nah that's shit do it again" type of prompts work better than the detailed ones.

- I have tried giving them instructions via JSON, TOML, YAML, Plaintext, Markdown, MDX, HTML, XML. I've tried giving them diagrams, mermaid charts, well commented code, well tested and covered code.

Time after time after time, my experiences are pretty much a 1:1 match to what we're seeing in these PRs we're discussing. Absolute wastes of time and massive failures for anything that involves literally any complexity whatsoever. I have at this point wasted several orders of magnitudes more time trying to get AIs to spit out anything usable than if I had just sat down and done things myself. Yes, they save time for some specific tasks. I love that I can give it a big ass JSON blob and tell it to extract the typedef for me and it saves me 20 minutes of very tedious work (assuming it doesn't just make random shit up from time to time, which happens ~30% of the time still). I love that if there's some unimportant script I need to cook up real quick, I can just ask it and toss it away after I'm done.

However, what I'm pissed beyond all reason about is that despite me NOT being some sort of luddite who's afraid of change or whatever insult gets thrown around, my experiences with these tools keep getting tossed aside, and I mean by people who have a direct effect on my continued employment and lack of starvation. You're doing it yourself. We are literally looking at a prime of example of the problem, from THE BIGGEST PUSHERS of this tool, with many people in this thread and the reddit thread commenting similar things to myself, and it's being thrown to the wayside as an "anecdote getting blown out of proportion".

What the fuck will it take for the AI pushers to finally stop moving the god damn goal posts and trying to spin every single failure presented to us in broad daylight as a "you're le holding it le wrong teehee" type of thing? Do we need to suffer through 20 million more slop PRs that accomplish nothing and STILL REQUIRE HUMAN HANDHOLDING before the sycophants relent a bit?

isaacremuant · 2h ago
Literally you're in a site where we are anything but armchair. We have years of experience. You're using your ad hominems wrong. Save them for a football thread and come up with actual arguments next time.
Quarrelsome · 10h ago
its more that the AI-first approach can be frustrating for senior devs to have to deal with. This post is an example of that. We're empathising with the code reviewers.
asadotzler · 5h ago
"brand new"? really? we've had these slop bots for years now. what's with all the fanboys pretending it was just released this month or something. it's not brand new. it's old and failing and executives who bet billions are now dismantling their engineering capabilities to try to make something out of those burned billions. claiming it's brand new is just silly.
Lendal · 10h ago
As the saying goes, It is difficult to get a man to understand something, when his salary depends on his not understanding it.

AI is aimed at eliminating the jobs of most of HN so it's understandable that HN doesn't want AI to succeed at its goal.

blitzar · 10h ago
Needs more bots.
Traubenfuchs · 8h ago
> These defines do not appear to be defined anywhere in the build system.

> @copilot fix the build error on apple platforms

> @copilot there is still build error on Apple platforms

Are those PRs some kind of software engineer focused comedy project?

wyett · 11h ago
We wanted a future where AIs read boring text and we wrote interesting stuff. Instead, we got…
zb3 · 8h ago
I tried to search all PRs submitted by copilot and I came up with this indirect way: https://github.com/search?q=%22You+can+make+Copilot+smarter+...

Is there a more direct way? Filtering PRs in the repo by copilot as the author seems currently broken..

xyst · 10h ago
llms are already very expensive to run on a per query basis. Now it’s being asked to run on massive codebases and attempt to fix issues.

Spending massive amounts of:

- energy to process these queries

- wasting time of mid-level and senior engineers to vibe code with copilot to ensure train and get it right

We are facing a climate change crisis and we continue to burn energy at useless initiatives so executives at big corporation can announce in quarterly shareholder meetings: "wE uSe Ai, wE aRe tHe FuTuRe, lAbOr fOrCe rEdUceD"

ramesh31 · 9h ago
The Github based solutions are missing the mark because we still need a human in the loop no matter what. Things are nowhere near the point of being able to just let something push to production. And if you still need a human in the loop, it is far more efficient to have them giving feedback in realtime, i.e. in an IDE with CLI access and the ability to run tests, where the dev is still ultimately responsible for making the PR. Management class is salivating at the thought of getting rid of engineers, hence all of this nonsense, but it seems they're still stuck with us for now.