Please don’t down vote me. I’m trying to get some truth out of all this. I had recently asked about the performance between local llm vs a subscription model. I’m using my local llms to write some code for a project I’m working on. Qwen 3 I believe. In no way can I give it instructions and it just makes my vision. It’s super helpful, sure, but it ain’t replacing programmers. I have a long running software vision where if I could remove a lot of the code complexity, I might have a chance to have a few minutes in the sun. I really want to experience ai that is amazing and productivity enhancing to the degree that it is hyped. Yet I keep reading doomsday articles that in a year or two, most white collar and knowledge jobs will all be taken by ai. What’s the truth here? In my day job, I’m in a purchasing material management role. I would love to get more automation going here, but the process changes and data organization and consolidation across departments would be a monumental achievement. Not in task complexity, but in people. How can I use ai to help me here as well? I’m not ignorant as I’ve written a good amount of code over the years to improve things in many areas. I could definitely work with and guide what ai gives me. I’d also like to find some simple documentation on using ai within a code base. I’m a bit leery only in the possibly of accidentally spending and exorbitant amount of money without knowing it. submitted by /u/inwardPersecution
Originally posted by u/inwardPersecution on r/ArtificialInteligence
