What Is ChatGPT And How Can It Make You A Better Developer

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  • Опубликовано: 18 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 326

  • @random_peter
    @random_peter Год назад +115

    We all just need to evolve as our technologies do. Use these great tools to become a better dev. Good luck to all.

  • @mikelautensack7351
    @mikelautensack7351 Год назад +188

    As a self taught dev 5 months in looking for a job this video was a relief 😅

    • @priyanshuvettori5179
      @priyanshuvettori5179 Год назад +7

      Let's connect on Twitter

    • @Wanderlauch
      @Wanderlauch Год назад

      Great last name, I might say😅

    • @VivekB123
      @VivekB123 Год назад +4

      Exactly ... I am in the same situation
      With ongoing recession and this
      Was really worried

    • @emreylmaz4533
      @emreylmaz4533 Год назад +4

      Im in same place brother

    • @rahullraj7667
      @rahullraj7667 Год назад

      Can relate to you

  • @heman248
    @heman248 Год назад +29

    I tried developing an app with chatgpt and it was basically an afternoon of trial and error telling chatgpt what I wanted and why it was wrong, but I knew how to correct it because I have done it before and know the concepts. It felt like google on steroids, but no different than reading a good stack overflow answer.

  •  Год назад +51

    I've tested ChatGPT on some codewars challenges and it did solve them pretty well. Not 100% off the bat, but requiring only minor fixes cutting down development time by 90%.

    • @prajjwal1010
      @prajjwal1010 Год назад +4

      it's going to learn and grow and make that 90 to 120%

    • @jasontodd1557
      @jasontodd1557 Год назад +5

      Also cutting down the need for junior or entry level developer.

    • @skymer7471
      @skymer7471 Год назад +1

      @@prajjwal1010 It's not learning in real time. Ask chatGPT :)

    • @konung5
      @konung5 Год назад +8

      @@jasontodd1557 If you cut down the need for junior developers, how are you going to get mid-to-senior level devs? They don't grow on trees! (yet)

    • @jasontodd1557
      @jasontodd1557 Год назад

      @konung just saying the entry for junior position is going to be a lot harder.

  • @casemisty3137
    @casemisty3137 Год назад +3

    Wow, talk about serendipity! I was just asking a question to ChatGPT about this topic hours ago and then I came across this video.
    I asked:
    "How do you view the possibility that advanced AI like yourself may lead to unemployment for some programmers?"
    Then I got the answer:
    "First of all, as an AI program, I don't have to worry about unemployment like humans do. However, it's true that the development of technology can lead to the disappearance of some jobs and create new ones at the same time. This kind of change is inevitable and is natural part of the progress of science and can also create new job opportunities.
    For unemployed programmers, I would suggest that they seize new opportunities, continue learning new skills, and find new job opportunities in new fields. It's important for workers to continuously learn and adapt in order to stay relevant in a changing job market. It may not be easy, but if they are able to embrace new challenges and work hard to adapt to new trends, I believe they will be able to succeed."
    This AI is truly incredible.

  • @colinmarshall6634
    @colinmarshall6634 Год назад +12

    As a learner, telling it to write something complex and then debugging what it does wrong is pretty useful for practicing debugging.

  • @marna_li
    @marna_li Год назад +37

    ChatGPT doesn't understand context. It just compiles information and presents it. But if "coders" are worried about ChatGPT giving the answers, they should start learning more about software development in a broader sense - understanding how to design software and to potentially operate this new tooling.

    • @pankajshinde475
      @pankajshinde475 Год назад +3

      This is what most people don't understand. It is just word model. It's not thinking behind the query you gave. It's just spitting out words which maximize accuracy for output for the query.

  • @jshstuff
    @jshstuff Год назад +59

    I have a feeling if you asked some follow up questions for the weather example, you’d get a better explanation of what the code does. I’m starting to realize there’s an art to crafting questions for ChatGPT to answer usefully.

    • @Alex-ry1gv
      @Alex-ry1gv Год назад +16

      Prompt engineering is the future

    • @glitchspark1663
      @glitchspark1663 Год назад +7

      Even without ChatGPT, crafting questions is also an art for programming.

    • @Nekoooooooooify
      @Nekoooooooooify Год назад

      Yep, chatgpt has "context" during the conversation. Asking follow up questions will yield better results. If a code is wrong, ask again why it was wrong and paste the output along with the expected output. It will 7/10 correct itself and give you a new code that's working. 3/10 is it will repeat itself by sending the same code but different formatting or another wrong code entirely.

    • @nr7343
      @nr7343 Год назад

      Dont lie to yourself.. i not art.. if you have little expiriance as a developer the qustion is nothing then play aroud with gpt

    • @jendabekCZ
      @jendabekCZ Год назад

      @@Alex-ry1gv Those algorithms will be improved to understand your question better as well, so I don't think "prompt engineering" will be necessary.

  • @aliciatraver7216
    @aliciatraver7216 Год назад +10

    One thing I really like about it is that I can ask it how to code something like a submission form. It'll give me the basic html for it which is kind of helpful but not necessarily how I'd actually code it. Then, I can say, "Refactor the previous code to make reusable components, then create scss styling to go with that code." It's really good about going back through previous answers and using that context to help with future responses.

  • @ChillAutos
    @ChillAutos Год назад +25

    I've already integrated chatgpt into my workflow. I reach for it a lot more than Google now because I can ask it to explain things, and also I can upload snippets and get it to suggest improvements and why it's better. Its far from perfect but it's fking incredible. Also it's great at writing linkedin profile stuff as well

    • @anettebianca6855
      @anettebianca6855 Год назад +1

      same - absolutely hate surfing for hours to find a simple line of code - this is mind blowing

    • @javier.alvarez764
      @javier.alvarez764 Год назад

      ehhh u guys are probably junior devs. one you have more experience you don't really need to use google that much. more of syntax and methods to use.

    • @ChillAutos
      @ChillAutos Год назад +4

      @@javier.alvarez764 haha you don't use docs or Google? Actually give it a go and you'll see the power of it. I've met plenty of "seasoned devs" like you still stuck in the past, and i run rings around you. You see chatgpt as some form of crutch, we see it as another tool at our disposal. Keep on this way of thinking though, I'll keep pulling features out.

    • @Xevion
      @Xevion Год назад

      @@ChillAutos Are you googling and searching literally every problem you come across? Because that's what it sounds like you're doing - reaching for your cane every time a problem comes along. That's not normal - a seasoned developer does not google constantly - they do not need to ask a bot for everything. I can see how this technology is going to be useful - but right now, it just generates a bunch of trash that I'm going to have to inspect and rewrite anyways. I'll use it to generate sentences and paragraphs for my portfolio, resume & profiles, but code? No, it's just going to tell me something I already know.

    • @ChillAutos
      @ChillAutos Год назад

      @@Xevion No lol. Who said im googling every single thing? Do i use google each day, yes 100%. Keep that way of thinking though man itll only help devs who choose to utilise all the tools available to us. Whats your thoughts on syntax highlighting or code completion like intellij?

  • @NCSurf888
    @NCSurf888 Год назад +2

    Been teaching myself development over the past few months and all these clickbait doom and gloom videos the past couple of days have had me questioning whether I should continue learning if I’ve been wasting my time. Thankful to hear someone put it in this light

  • @consig1iere294
    @consig1iere294 Год назад +3

    Used it for the first time yesterday. By the looks of it, it would be an addition to my toolbox rather than replacing me.

  • @MetricMelon
    @MetricMelon Год назад +13

    I'd love to see more chatGPT stuff from you. It's very helpful to better understand what types of queries I should be asking the ai for when I'm programming

  • @khairiyusoff5040
    @khairiyusoff5040 Год назад +2

    Evolve , adapt, learn, train and keep going. That is what I am going to do.

  • @randomride6057
    @randomride6057 Год назад +1

    U r the best. I mean it. While all the other youtube developers are fear mongering and predicting some kind of collapse, you are making videos that reassure aspiring web devs. Thank you

  • @yetibop
    @yetibop Год назад +1

    There are absolutely flaws but to be in early stages and this amazing is unbelievable. I have used this to answer questions that Google would take 30minutes of searching for.

  • @umairiqbal5172
    @umairiqbal5172 Год назад +9

    Finally someone who says it won’t make all software engineer jobs obsolete and that there’s still hope. I’ve been questioning if completing my CS degree is worth it or should I change my major. I like CS but if it can’t pay ..

    • @borstenpinsel
      @borstenpinsel Год назад +1

      Maybe but only 5 years ago there was no public ai that could even create anything remotely resembling working code. And this ai does much more and is not at all specialised in coding. Maybe in 2 years it will be different. A "perfect" solution is also really limiting. Framework today let you create sites quickly but even simple stuff like changing the color of a button is/was difficult in some. An AI that creates a full app might be similar.

    • @jm1835
      @jm1835 Год назад +1

      This guy is a RUclipsr, better go read what high level devs from Google, Amazon, etc, are discussing in tech forums. 90% of programming jobs will be obsolete in 3 years, either specialise deeply or start pivoting into another industry. AI is here to stay and will only get more common and powerful, don't be a fool and think your job is safe.

    • @awesomedude4428
      @awesomedude4428 Год назад +4

      @@jm1835 lmao it can barely replace entry level jobs in the next three years. Don't be fool to believe this guy. Keep learning new things and move ahead with time, you'll be fine.

  • @ToddDunning
    @ToddDunning Год назад +29

    The story is just starting. OpenAI is actually Microsoft, I know this from a MSFT senior exec friend. It is intended to destroy Google and has been under development for a decade. This release is very small potatoes and was just to gauge public response. The next release will be several times as good and will have its own web index of a similar size to Google. They even use it to work out scenarios to strategically plan how to do to Google what they did to Yahoo.

    • @Ivacuk
      @Ivacuk Год назад +6

      What are you talking about, is that some kind of revenge? xD

    • @spacegoat_3d801
      @spacegoat_3d801 Год назад +4

      @@Ivacuk revenge of the nerds (irl)

    • @ToddDunning
      @ToddDunning Год назад +3

      @@Ivacuk The idea is that Search will be much more comprehensive and also non-biased.

    • @ko-Daegu
      @ko-Daegu Год назад

      @@ToddDunning DL right now as of its is super baised not a single white paper shows otherwise if what you are saying is true this is huge practical and theoretical break thru
      I’m really not trying to call u a liar but what you are stating is about pity insane

    • @AleMilos
      @AleMilos Год назад

      even though this is not going to happen as you said, I feel this is going to happen. Start asking to chatGpt "how do I shut down the android walking in my living room?"

  • @dionysios4714
    @dionysios4714 Год назад

    Somebody finally gave an amazing reason why it won't replace us, you're the man.

  • @lauris5275
    @lauris5275 Год назад +1

    In 3 years this will replace many jobs for sure. I tried to ask questions in my native language and it answers pretty well. It's just scary.

  • @arkemiffo
    @arkemiffo Год назад +11

    I believe that when this matures, the dev's primary job is to be able to communicate in the best way with the AI to get the code needed, as well as analyzing the code given, and correct it if and when necessary.
    At the moment though it works quite good to create small functions that does one specific thing only, so if you can boil down your application to this level, I think it could work, but you still need to be specific with it, otherwise you'll run into bugs because it took "liberties" where you didn't specify. I've gotten several smaller functions that work perfectly fine, things like isPrime(n), isFibonacci(n), WeightedAverage(array, array) and things like that. Simple functions that are self-contained and only works with what is given it.
    But a good example is the id talked about in the video. You need to specify to the AI that it needs to be a list-independent unique id (or whatever, I'm not an expert).
    I think we're still a long, long way away from self-coding AI without the input from humans.

    • @flethacker
      @flethacker Год назад +7

      'assistant manager to the regional AI developer'

    • @ToddDunning
      @ToddDunning Год назад

      Exactly. Just like CoPilot

    • @ko-Daegu
      @ko-Daegu Год назад

      Also many functions are wrong sometimes it says here the max number of this numpy array but actually gives me the min number and Code only worked coïncidencely

    • @ko-Daegu
      @ko-Daegu Год назад

      The function that worked fine are simple already written millions of time try for example a function that analys the M3u8 format and extra data from it

  • @alibarznji2000
    @alibarznji2000 Год назад +6

    As a mid level software engineer I've tried it and it's fairly limited, but it has a huge potential, but it can't replace your job at all.
    It only gives you instructions on what to do when you know how to do it (idk if that makes sense).
    Being a non-technical person is like being a lost person in a jungle full of possibilities and you can't make sense of anything even if you have the tools in front of you.

  • @somesaykosm732
    @somesaykosm732 Год назад +2

    i've been working on my coding skills for 6months now. i almost cried when i heard of this chatbot, cause i'm afraid my hard work was all for nothing.

  • @zCrabOG
    @zCrabOG Год назад +1

    I had excellent success with it asking to review my 100 line python assignment. There were no comments. It told me in the check_in() function i wasnt checking whether a car was already checked in before checking it in. And that I wasnt rounding up the parking hours correctly for partial hours.

  • @FirstNameLastName-gh9iw
    @FirstNameLastName-gh9iw Год назад

    5:23 I think it’s better in some cases, it’s explanations are honestly better than a stackoverflow post from 12 years ago responding to a guy with a similar but different question

  • @carltongordon
    @carltongordon Год назад +1

    Regarding the "what does this function do?" question, asking what is the out come of this function would give you a better response

  • @mih563
    @mih563 Год назад

    You can make your own model to extend the default models, it gets more expensive but you can train it with your enterprise code.
    This is what I do since December.

  • @pensums
    @pensums Год назад

    One use case I found amazing is asking to translate a JSON snippet from a language to another. It actually knows to translate the values and not the keys.

  • @a5tr00
    @a5tr00 Год назад +1

    The best explanation of ChGPT I have found! Well done mate!

  • @bernardus3289
    @bernardus3289 Год назад

    This thing helps with a quick google answer. Gives better answers than me serving through 10 webpages for answers

  • @anettebianca6855
    @anettebianca6855 Год назад

    used it since seeing on day 3 - absolutely mind blowing - saves SO much time when you're coding

  • @cherubin7th
    @cherubin7th Год назад +1

    ChatGPT is basically a search engine. It knows this answers, because someone answered it and it combines different patterns.

  • @btm1
    @btm1 Год назад +2

    as someone that has been following the "programming will be one of the last automated jobs" narrative for the past few years, all that I can say is that the cope is real. How can you be sure that future version won't replace many jobs?

  • @zoroXgamings
    @zoroXgamings Год назад

    Actually I am learning from it, like how to optimise group by , setup Kafka , and really it gives very accurate answers 😌👌

  • @flethacker
    @flethacker Год назад +7

    It will take your job as it continues to lower the barrier to entry. just like google/youtube leveled the playing field for anyone,anywhere to learn coding, this will just make it easier for a non technical person to do what a technically trained person did. Its like giving alexa voice commands and getting coding results....where as before you needed a manager/dev to get that command processed

    • @stoogel
      @stoogel Год назад +2

      A non-technical person will never be able to do it, even if the sci fi scenario where you just feed a specification to the AI actually happens

    • @flethacker
      @flethacker Год назад

      @@stoogel any non technical person can read a script of prompts ... much like low level tech support operators do. Prompt engineering is the very short term skill to learn...but this is just a template of information it will be free information for everyone

    • @stoogel
      @stoogel Год назад +4

      @@flethacker But when writing code is mostly the AI's job, there will be much more expected of developers, not less. I doubt the job of programming will go back to the menial task it was in the 70s.

    • @flethacker
      @flethacker Год назад

      @@stoogel the developer wont be expected to do more...they will just be unnecessary. similar to how to handcrafted html/css was made obsolete by frameworks like bootstrap,tailwind,etc... once you can abstract and templatize a business process, you can then have the AI generate it for you. It wont need experts to implement anymore...just generalists

    • @someoneyouprobablyknowandl9964
      @someoneyouprobablyknowandl9964 Год назад +2

      Google exists, You Tube exists, Tutorials exist. Yet there are car mechanics being paid to change tires.
      Don't underestimate how lazy humans are.

  • @krtz23
    @krtz23 Год назад +2

    Chatgpt seems to be good at producing simple template scripts but anything complex would lead to broken code.

  • @torquebiker9959
    @torquebiker9959 Год назад

    Thanks to Travis for creating this amazing channel! 😆

  • @Grim_Nerd
    @Grim_Nerd Год назад +3

    ChatGPT is superior to Stack Overflow for the simple fact that you don't need to deal with the people who post answers on Stack Overflow.

  • @encapsule2220
    @encapsule2220 Год назад

    Ive been using it to help me refactor hard coded things that are repetitive and think it can be done in a better way. But its important to understand the reasons why it was done that way, if ur just making it spit out code and copy pasting without understanding ur robbing urself of a learning experience.

  • @gr8tbigtreehugger
    @gr8tbigtreehugger Год назад

    Thanks for this insightful video!
    Love to see a ChatGPT vs Co-Pilot battle!

  • @julianvogel6311
    @julianvogel6311 Год назад

    Funny, I finished your nested comment tutorial yesterday. But wrote the useAsync hook a little bit different and in Typescript. Wasn't happy about my Typescript Implementation but chatGPT just solved the problem perfectly for me:D

  • @chiragLpatel
    @chiragLpatel Год назад

    best explanation!! heard about chat GPT and wanted to understand what it is.. and found this one best ..

  • @devarshihazarika4871
    @devarshihazarika4871 Год назад +1

    The audio glitch around when he says "there is no terminators going to do this around" was a good jump scare

  • @k.ashutoshbaitharu3964
    @k.ashutoshbaitharu3964 Год назад

    I admire you for how optimist you are!

  • @AndriiPeliak
    @AndriiPeliak Год назад

    Awesome channel! I've been a fan of your tutorials for a while now and I've learned a lot from them. It would be really cool to see you integrate ChatGPT into some IDE, it would make it even more interactive and helpful for your viewers. It could be a great feature to have a virtual assistant to help with coding queries or troubleshoot issues. Keep up the good work!

  • @dariobntz8337
    @dariobntz8337 Год назад

    this video gives me hope again, thanks man... we really needed to have an unbiased objective opinion about this matter

  • @konscomputertutorials7473
    @konscomputertutorials7473 Год назад

    The most useful and and helpful review i have seen so far . good job kyle you are the best

  • @Vikings-uk3ht
    @Vikings-uk3ht Год назад +8

    People are vastly underestimating this. These programs are able to improve at such an insane pace that we have no idea what is coming. It absolutely will be able to build enterprise size applications, and much sooner than people think.

    • @awesomedude4428
      @awesomedude4428 Год назад +1

      Buddy its a language model, its trained on billions of lines of code. It doesn't have its own creativity, its like a faster Google.

    • @skymer7471
      @skymer7471 Год назад

      "As an artificial intelligence, I don't have the ability to learn or experience things in real time like a human does. I was trained on a large dataset of text and can use that knowledge to provide information and answer questions to the best of my ability, but I don't have the ability to learn new things or gain new experiences after my training has been completed."
      They are not "able to improve"... They don't even understand the words they are writing.

    • @Vikings-uk3ht
      @Vikings-uk3ht Год назад

      @@skymer7471 The GPT3 model can't improve, but OpenAI can with its newer models, like the upcoming GPT4.

  • @wylfwylfwylf
    @wylfwylfwylf Год назад +1

    As my teacher said to this.
    A codebase that no one understands or know how to develope is useless.
    This is a tool, not something that will replace developers

  • @nicholaskoffler294
    @nicholaskoffler294 Год назад +1

    I think you're wrong about it writing code. I've been coding with it by copy and pasting the code base of my app file by file and then asking it to add features and it does it really well.

  • @kaylemaclou
    @kaylemaclou Год назад

    Well explained. Thanks again, Kyle!

  • @MrBrown33
    @MrBrown33 Год назад

    This is the way I saw it too, it's the perfect tool to have at your disposal as a developer!

  • @aelabassi
    @aelabassi Год назад +1

    This is only the first release, and it did a great job so far.just wait for the next improvements that will change your mind gradually!.

  • @nishantk322
    @nishantk322 Год назад

    I found this video is best explanation ever about chatGPT
    Thank you 😊

  • @khaled-dev
    @khaled-dev Год назад

    come back to this 2~3 years from now it will be insane

  • @baatar
    @baatar Год назад

    Finally, a sane person on this topic, I knew I could always count on Kyle :)

  • @eranjeneabeysinghe8100
    @eranjeneabeysinghe8100 Год назад

    I believe this is great as a developer. The reason is that this allows us developers to move into a higher level of abstraction rather than tinkering with low level codes and debugging, which is tedious. This AI tech reinforces the idea of declarative development. Soon devs will just be limited to declare what the system should do rather than defining steps of how to do it.

  • @77dreimaldie0
    @77dreimaldie0 Год назад

    Appreciate the immediate summary 👍🏽

  • @shivan2418
    @shivan2418 Год назад +2

    Fully agree. I've been telling people this thing is a great tutor rather than a great snippet writer.
    Its not perfect tho. I asked it about how to do something in docker and it gives you a solution that only works in old versions of docker, but it does not tell you.

  • @martinlutherkingjr.5582
    @martinlutherkingjr.5582 Год назад

    In its CURRENT state Chat GPT isn’t a threat to developer jobs, the problem is if improves at an exponential or even just a non-linear rate we will have a big problem.

  • @pastuh
    @pastuh Год назад

    Sometimes I ask to provide info in table format. It looks better and sometimes shorter

  • @koushikvss6277
    @koushikvss6277 Год назад

    Thanks for the awaited video and you explained it very well

  • @FlorinPop
    @FlorinPop Год назад

    I also thought that you are Travis Neilson... Seems like I'm as smart as ChatGPT

  • @rxbracho
    @rxbracho Год назад +2

    As Sir Roger Penrose (Nobel laureate in Physics 2020) says: Artificial Intelligence will never be able to *understand* what it is doing. He gets to such conclusion from looking at Gödel's Incompleteness Theorem, in case anyone is interested. Basically, he shows that comprehension, a precursor of true intelligence, may not be achieved via computation.

  • @a.galvaop.787
    @a.galvaop.787 Год назад +1

    A: What is 2+2? AI: I don't know. A: The answer is a number. What is 2+2? AI: 0? A: It's not 0. 2+2 is 4. What is 3+3? AI: 4?

  • @MusicAnshul
    @MusicAnshul Год назад

    i agree , chatgpt also can't give correct codes to problems like 80% of the times. It can just provide examples.

  • @AAfzal-lk2nf
    @AAfzal-lk2nf Год назад

    My top 3 best coding chanels:-
    1) web dev simplified
    2) web dev simplified
    3) web dev simplified

  • @1234abcd12344
    @1234abcd12344 Год назад +2

    A web developer saying my job is not replaceable by machine was the same thing elevator operators said to themselves... Time will tell

  • @muad4414
    @muad4414 Год назад

    I am always amazed!!by you kyle 👍🏿

  • @sanchogodinho
    @sanchogodinho Год назад +1

    I literally converted my node fastify code to python fastapi with it 😲😲😲!!!

  • @brianmalave4286
    @brianmalave4286 Год назад

    Thank you Kyle. Some useful information about this stuff at last. I haven’t try it because the simplest Idea of “taking devs jobs from an AI” is just stupid for me.. this is just another tool to use for us. And that’s it.. I’m thinking more of an Idea of evolving jobs.

  • @esdeathTheEternal
    @esdeathTheEternal Год назад

    Literally answer all my questions in 10 seconds

  • @btm1
    @btm1 Год назад +4

    The cope is real, future improved versions that can also analyze existing code bases or tailored to build apps from scratch will defintely lead to a lot less programers needed! Also you can tell by following the narrative in the past few years that people are notoriusly bad at making prediction about how efficient AI will be at coding. But the release of Chat GPT 3 was a wake up call for many.

  • @pottoker612
    @pottoker612 Год назад

    chatgpt prompt: explain react hooks theoretically in the style of a juggalo
    response:
    Alright, lemme break it down for you, homie. So, React hooks are like a fresh new tool that you can use to make your web apps even doper. They let you use state and other React features without having to write class components. That means less code, less hassle, and more time to focus on making your app look fresh.
    It's like having a new hatchet in your Juggalo arsenal. You can use it to chop through your code like a ninja, and create some dope-ass user experiences. Whether you're using hooks to manage state, handle side effects, or reuse code, they make it easier to keep your app running smoothly.
    Think of it like this: React hooks are like the Faygo to your Juggalo party. They keep things flowing and make sure everyone's having a good time. So if you wanna take your web dev game to the next level, you gotta check out React hooks. Whoop whoop!

  • @Coolcucumber2
    @Coolcucumber2 Год назад

    I tried asking about code snippets - but I instead asked: "what is this code doing?" Not: "what does this function do" and I received a much more detailed answer - not sure if that may work for you as well

  • @jamessullenriot
    @jamessullenriot Год назад +3

    I have so many thoughts about this over the past few days. For all of the doom and gloom of developers, lawyers, doctors, content writers etc ... imagine in this did display all of those jobs and the only jobs left were trades and things like that. Well, that doesn't work either because you will have massive unemployment so there would be no home Renos or work like that to do to pay the trades.
    Specifically about chatgpt responses. - first few days I am blown away, I still am. But I also and kind of bored with it now in many different ways. For example, "Write a short story in the style of Stephen King". Sure it uses some "dark" language but its a bland basic story.
    Music - I'm a software developer but I also play music. Real instruments not using some chord pack from unison to make the same generic song over and over again. All chatgpt is good at is music theory and again, generic creation. You can play with it and manipulate your queries to get something more, but its becoming easy to know it was AI generated because it sounds like some Drake or Weeknd nonsense.
    Now, with all of that, this tool and others will get better with time. But even if they get better there is the idea of cost. How much will it cost to run this? How long before ads and things of that nature? Then its just google/Facebook etc looking to sell products. But if you go back to the doom and gloom scenario and people are laid off because they are replaced with this, then no one has money to buy the ads to support this and it all falls apart .... unless
    Those depopulation conspiracy theories are not conspiracy theories and now we are in a - you know what, forget it. Just take what I wrote there and ask chatGPT to summarize it because obviously im too scatterbrained at the moment to make any sense about all of this at the moment.

  • @gbogdan3528
    @gbogdan3528 Год назад

    Like for answering straight off the bat.

  • @awesomecharles5494
    @awesomecharles5494 Год назад

    I love you man, I feel safe now...

  • @michelaveline
    @michelaveline Год назад

    By the way, thanks for the music recommendationd Be'lakor band!!

  • @rahul38o493
    @rahul38o493 Год назад

    I see a future of prompt engneering
    with advance AI
    people who can explain clearly and effectively will have upper hand
    Because AI can save many days of manual hardwork and can write same codes within hours if explained with clarification on needs.
    Step by step.
    First codes were written manually as bunch of 1 and 0 , today's codes are written with special commands built by pioneer Developers to speed up developing
    In future it will go one more step ahead with promt Engneering
    As long as Developer will have clear goal and understanding of fundamentals they will able to get out a meaningful response from AI

  • @t3ntube357
    @t3ntube357 Год назад +3

    Thank you, I want someone to even lie to me about this concern 🙃, also I feel like ChatGPT is now in his Beta mode, only God knows what the future hold for us

    • @blendergaming1579
      @blendergaming1579 Год назад +2

      The AI is only as good as what it's trained on and needs to know the context of the situation if it were to be able to replace people. Even then someone still needs to review the ouput and understand the code to ensure it's working properly and makes sense. Worst case scenario you have "Prompt Engineer" jobs where someone still needs to know development and how to ask the right questions to get the correct response.

  • @abrahamibizugbe477
    @abrahamibizugbe477 Год назад

    Feels good to be the first commenter, thanks for the priceless insights you always give.😁😁😁

  • @dnasredine
    @dnasredine Год назад

    the right question is not if it can replace your job. But if it can replace google for any question that you have...

  • @Arun-xs7vi
    @Arun-xs7vi Год назад

    Thank you for talking about this topic

  • @cod3ddy74
    @cod3ddy74 Год назад

    well explained, i was so scared

  • @bulelanibotman
    @bulelanibotman Год назад

    wow! this is actually fascinating

  • @clayfullmer
    @clayfullmer Год назад +1

    This will get exponentially better. It might replace you in 2 years. We've got to adapt.

  • @enricodemarchi1412
    @enricodemarchi1412 Год назад +1

    It wont replace 100% of programmers job's, but 85% Its a real possibility

  • @ASMR_TODAY_TOMORROW
    @ASMR_TODAY_TOMORROW Год назад +1

    Used it today to create a docker container for my react app. I never used docker before and got it done in 10 minutes which could have taken me a few hours to figure out.

    • @flethacker
      @flethacker Год назад +5

      yeah but there is a difference between 'getting it done' and 'understanding how to get it done'. this is microsoft paperclip for code development

  • @maskman4821
    @maskman4821 Год назад

    This is an awesome talk 😍

  • @goswamianshuman
    @goswamianshuman Год назад

    Can you make a video about portfolio websites ? Also how to get inspiring designs.

  • @MohitJakhotra
    @MohitJakhotra Год назад +2

    But as people start asking more and more coding questions it will just get more and more accurate and perfect.

    • @skymer7471
      @skymer7471 Год назад

      False ! Chat GPT is not trained on real time data. Ask ChatGPT !
      "As an artificial intelligence, I don't have the ability to learn or experience things in real time like a human does. I was trained on a large dataset of text and can use that knowledge to provide information and answer questions to the best of my ability, but I don't have the ability to learn new things or gain new experiences after my training has been completed."

  • @nick-pu4zae
    @nick-pu4zae Год назад

    I will always watch your videos 👌❤️

  • @CTimmerman
    @CTimmerman Год назад

    4:41 TIL a React hook is just a hip new name for a function.

  • @omaranbazna9066
    @omaranbazna9066 Год назад +1

    Albert Einstein:
    This project is so easy ,even my chat box can develop it

  • @ankitkumardubey0095
    @ankitkumardubey0095 Год назад

    Thank you so much for this video.

  • @ThulasiRaman-po8lv
    @ThulasiRaman-po8lv Год назад

    Hey, kyle,
    First of all, Thank you for making helpful content making videos,
    You are Awesome!😀
    I have a beginner learning React js So Keep following your Videos. your videos are beneficial and I Learn Easily
    How to Logical thinking to learn js problems concept any videos or any practice site please make it video for useful
    And Also Please make future videos make react js redux and Node js Series.....
    Thank you.

  • @Languagist
    @Languagist Год назад

    I think, for beginner developers, it's a good place to ask questions without having SOME experienced programmers give condescending replies.

  • @reup6943
    @reup6943 Год назад

    ChatGPT takes into account the context and history of your conversation, to get more accurate answers start a new thread each time, otherwise you will confusion the AI ^^

  • @valentine.samoylov
    @valentine.samoylov Год назад

    Good video! 👍