this post was submitted on 07 Dec 2025
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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.

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[–] HugeNerd@lemmy.ca 30 points 19 hours ago (2 children)

Computers are too powerful and too cheap. Bring back COBOL, painfully expensive CPU time, and some sort of basic knowledge of what's actually going on.

Pain for everyone!

[–] Thorry@feddit.org 16 points 19 hours ago (1 children)

Yeah I think around the Pentium 200mhz point was the sweet spot. Powerful enough to do a lot of things, but not so powerful that software can be as inefficient and wasteful as it is today.

[–] PartyAt15thAndSummit@lemmy.zip 4 points 17 hours ago

I share a similar sentiment, but I'd place the turning point somewhere between 1 and 2 GHz.

[–] HC4L@lemmy.world 7 points 19 hours ago (1 children)

Be careful what you wish for, with RAM prices soaring owning a home computer might become less of an option. Luckily we can get a subscription for computing power easily!

[–] Omgpwnies@lemmy.world 9 points 18 hours ago

I built a new PC early October, literally 2 weeks later RAM prices went nuts... so glad I pulled the trigger when I did