> In any case, there's a huge difference between "the barrier to entry has been lowered" and "those who don't use LLMs will be left in the dust". I think the latter is ridiculous.
Yeah, it’s a bit incendiary, I just wanted to turn it into a more useful conversation.
I also think it overstates the case, but I do think it’s an opportunity.
It’s not just that the barrier to entry has been lowered (which it has) but that someone with a lot of existing skill can leverage that. Not everyone can bring that to the table, and not everyone who can is doing so. That’s the current advantage (in my opinion, of course).
All that said, I thought the Vision Pro was going to usher in a new era of computing, so I’m not much of a prognosticator.
I think it's a mistake to defend and/or "reinterpret" the hype, which is not helping to promote the technology to people who aren't bandwagoners. If anything, it drives them away. It's a red flag.
I wish you would just say to the previous commenter, hey, you appear to be exaggerating, and that's not a good idea.
Yeah, it’s a bit incendiary, I just wanted to turn it into a more useful conversation.
I also think it overstates the case, but I do think it’s an opportunity.
It’s not just that the barrier to entry has been lowered (which it has) but that someone with a lot of existing skill can leverage that. Not everyone can bring that to the table, and not everyone who can is doing so. That’s the current advantage (in my opinion, of course).
All that said, I thought the Vision Pro was going to usher in a new era of computing, so I’m not much of a prognosticator.