I do get a big boost from GPT-4 in some areas, for a different reason - it's a great and versatile tool for overcoming random mental and emotional barriers.
There are plenty of tasks I'd normally procrastinate on, or be reluctant to do, because they're tiring, boring, or emotionally difficult for reasons specific to myself. That is, cases when I have the knowledge and the skills, but lack the willpower or composture (or glucose / caffeine in my bloodstream). Using GPT-4 for with that kind of work isn't saving much time vs. what I could do, but it is compared to what would actually happen, which is either me procrastinating on it, delaying it for a better time (next morning, day with less meetings, etc.), or suffering a 2-10x performance penalty from having to fight through my own emotional blocks.
On the net, this isn't making me 5-10x more effective at work. It's probably not even 2x, short-term. Mid-term, 2-5x would be possible, because all the things I did earlier than later add up. Time will tell.
Am I telling on myself here? Maybe. Sorry not sorry. I am a human being, with a human brain, which means some things that should be easy for me, become hard for unrelated reasons. GPT-4 is one of many tools I have to overcome such challenges, but it's a particularly powerful and versatile one, so I'm happy that I can use it.
(Also, INB4, I have access to company-approved deployment on Azure, so I'm in the clear with using it at work.)
Ye, sometimes I don't have enough energy to research how to implement something that day, so I'd put it off till I had the energy. Instead, gpt generates the code, and I just have to debug/test it.
I guess I'm a bit confused at what you're saying. Are you asking it to explain things to you in a pirate voice so that it is more entertaining and you can maintain concentration? I don't find this as really relying on GPT. Or are you saying when you have simple routines that need to be implemented but are boring and so you have GPT generate most of them for you to reduce the bordem? I also don't see that as contentious with what I said above (all programming has a lot of boring and routine shit).
But if you're outsourcing a significant portion of your overall work (day-to-day, not just off-days) then that's more what I'm getting at. The people that are like "I couldn't imagine programming without copilot" or such. Every one of those that I've met is missing important base knowledge about programming in general that ends up making a lot of technical debt for themselves. The "build fast and break things" style realistically only works if you have a certain level of expertise OR the project doesn't need to be robust. Former because to actually be fast you need to have a good picture of the whole or else you end up chasing one thing to the next and your overall path is far slower but might seem faster because you're sprinting the whole time.
There are plenty of tasks I'd normally procrastinate on, or be reluctant to do, because they're tiring, boring, or emotionally difficult for reasons specific to myself. That is, cases when I have the knowledge and the skills, but lack the willpower or composture (or glucose / caffeine in my bloodstream). Using GPT-4 for with that kind of work isn't saving much time vs. what I could do, but it is compared to what would actually happen, which is either me procrastinating on it, delaying it for a better time (next morning, day with less meetings, etc.), or suffering a 2-10x performance penalty from having to fight through my own emotional blocks.
On the net, this isn't making me 5-10x more effective at work. It's probably not even 2x, short-term. Mid-term, 2-5x would be possible, because all the things I did earlier than later add up. Time will tell.
Am I telling on myself here? Maybe. Sorry not sorry. I am a human being, with a human brain, which means some things that should be easy for me, become hard for unrelated reasons. GPT-4 is one of many tools I have to overcome such challenges, but it's a particularly powerful and versatile one, so I'm happy that I can use it.
(Also, INB4, I have access to company-approved deployment on Azure, so I'm in the clear with using it at work.)