Just want to clarify, this is not my Substack, I’m just sharing this because I found it insightful.

The author describes himself as a “fractional CTO”(no clue what that means, don’t ask me) and advisor. His clients asked him how they could leverage AI. He decided to experience it for himself. From the author(emphasis mine):

I forced myself to use Claude Code exclusively to build a product. Three months. Not a single line of code written by me. I wanted to experience what my clients were considering—100% AI adoption. I needed to know firsthand why that 95% failure rate exists.

I got the product launched. It worked. I was proud of what I’d created. Then came the moment that validated every concern in that MIT study: I needed to make a small change and realized I wasn’t confident I could do it. My own product, built under my direction, and I’d lost confidence in my ability to modify it.

Now when clients ask me about AI adoption, I can tell them exactly what 100% looks like: it looks like failure. Not immediate failure—that’s the trap. Initial metrics look great. You ship faster. You feel productive. Then three months later, you realize nobody actually understands what you’ve built.

      • AmbiguousProps@lemmy.today
        link
        fedilink
        English
        arrow-up
        25
        ·
        edit-2
        24 hours ago

        I mean… has anyone other than the company that made the tool said so? Like from a third party? I don’t trust that they’re not just advertising.

        • Rimu@piefed.social
          link
          fedilink
          English
          arrow-up
          4
          ·
          edit-2
          23 hours ago

          The answer to that is literally in the first sentence of the body of the article I linked to.

          • DSN9@lemmy.ml
            link
            fedilink
            English
            arrow-up
            15
            ·
            23 hours ago

            Ai says Ai correction tool about how crappy Ai is at coding’s article is 99 percent chance of being Ai, results generated by Ai. . .

      • AmbiguousProps@lemmy.today
        link
        fedilink
        English
        arrow-up
        25
        ·
        23 hours ago

        Sure, but plenty of journalists use the em-dash. That’s where LLMs got it from originally. It alone is not a signature of LLM use in journalistic articles (I’m not calling this CTO guy a journalist, to be clear)

        • JcbAzPx@lemmy.world
          link
          fedilink
          English
          arrow-up
          1
          ·
          4 hours ago

          Context is everything. In publishing it’s standard; in online forums it’s either needlessly pretentious or AI and either way they deserve to be called out.