The Human-in-the-Loop Is Tired
43 points
3 hours ago
| 10 comments
| pydantic.dev
| HN
appplication
38 seconds ago
[-]
> Here's a term for what I think is happening: the human reward function problem. In machine learning, a reward function tells an agent what good looks like. Writing code by hand was never easy, but it was full of small rewards. Solving a problem in your head. Understanding a gnarly bit of logic. Watching the code compile. The feeling of control. LLM-assisted programming has automated much of the work that generated those dopamine hits and replaced it with the cognitive load of review and supervision. The satisfying part shrank. The exhausting part grew. And there are no new rewards to fill the gap.

Say what you will about the Claudisms in this piece, this bit certainly rings true for me. With old school coding, there was always a reward at the end, the harder it was, the more satisfying it felt.

With agentic coding, I really doesn’t feel like that, at least not in the same way. It feels more like continually riding a wave of productivity, where small features or huge features have similar levels of interaction required. And that’s exciting in the beginning but quickly becomes very tiring.

reply
N_Lens
1 hour ago
[-]
While I appreciate and agree with the key points of the post, Claude's writing style fingerprints are all over it and I guess it's even more exhausting to read someone's AI written article.
reply
hahahaa
1 hour ago
[-]
I don't think it is AI, but I bet it has been through editing/review to match a corporate style. LLMs were trained on this.
reply
anon373839
15 minutes ago
[-]
The writing style, if not AI, is at least weirdly tryhard.

Turning to the substance of the article: why do people feel the need to run this fast? I have certainly experimented with letting coding agents run amok. The first few times you try it, it feels like a superpower. Then you start examining the icky choices they made in a codebase that is now a dense forest. Then you have to expend a bunch of effort beating it back into submission. Or I guess you can YOLO and throw more AI at it, but then I agree with the person quoted saying "at that point, what am I still doing here?" This is not a satisfying or sustainable way to build, and there really is no reason other than hype and FOMO to do it.

reply
postsantum
40 minutes ago
[-]
"It's not" - 3 matches

Dashline - present

Yes, it's AI-written

reply
samplatt
30 minutes ago
[-]
"It's not" only has two matches; the third is "It's noticable". The other two are a whole paragraph dedicated to "it's not X, it's Y" which is a little more than you'd normally expect.

Firefox doesn't seem to discriminate between em-dashes and hyphens using ctrl-F so I'm not sure about those.

Having said that the tone REEKS of AI generation, so meh.

reply
parl_match
46 minutes ago
[-]
"If you can't be bothered to write it, I can't be bothered to read it."
reply
maxcoder3344
32 minutes ago
[-]
The most exhausting thing is listening to everyone complain about ai writing. It's the norm now and it isn't going away.
reply
happytoexplain
29 minutes ago
[-]
I have such a hard time believing the implied premise of these complaints-about-complaints.

Just say you don't mind AI writing - make that argument. Don't make this nonsensical, defeatist, "if it's common, stop criticizing it" argument.

reply
singingtoday
26 minutes ago
[-]
Well put. This kind of rebuttal, the "I'm not A, you're A", is not only tired, it's a strait up school yard fallacy.
reply
maxcoder3344
15 minutes ago
[-]
I mean fine contine to whine and not read articles that used AI. Enjoy reading nothing ever again and constantly making the comment "omg ai".
reply
_fs
12 minutes ago
[-]
You created a new account for this?
reply
maxcoder3344
5 minutes ago
[-]
No. I created an account for this. Hacker news used to be a place I could come read interesting content and peoples reactions and thoughts to it. now it's interesting articles with 100% of the comments whining that it's written by AI. Sad what hackernews has become
reply
singingtoday
28 minutes ago
[-]
If complaining is exhausting to you, then I recommend avoiding Internet comments.
reply
maxcoder3344
14 minutes ago
[-]
Nah just whining about AI. At least it has given the hoards of uninteresting people something to comment on every single hackernews article now
reply
bgun
26 minutes ago
[-]
Complaints about complainers are even more exhausting.
reply
zem
1 hour ago
[-]
unlike the op, I've been having a wonderful time using claude, both at work and for my own personal projects, so I will share what has worked for me, just in case it resonates with anyone else.

my anecdotal advice is to avoid the entire "agent" temptation, and treat the LLM as a code generator. have a single session running at a time. come up with a plan, iterate on it until you are satisfied, then tell it to execute the plan, and watch it. not necessarily to the extent of reading the scroll (though I sometimes do do that too!) but as it finishes each step look over what it has done, suggest improvements and course corrections, and then let it go on to the next step. at the end you will have a pretty good grasp of the state of the code, and the overall time it will take you isn't really any longer than trying to churn out reams of code and then go through it all at once.

the other option if you want something closer to a one shot workflow is to go into far more detail during the planning stage, have it describe not just architectural details but actual code (if you're a senior engineer especially you probably know what the key pieces of code that will drive a lot of other decisions mechanically are likely to be).

also refactoring is cheaper than it has ever been, if something feels hard to grasp to you stop and work with the LLM until you like the looks of it better.

and again, the key bit is to have one LLM doing one thing at a time, and to stay engaged in the process while it does so.

reply
hahahaa
1 hour ago
[-]
I agree I think Vibe coding (even with myraid loops) is more burnouty than using it like an assistant and being closer to the output.
reply
akeck
18 minutes ago
[-]
Reminds me of "The Animal is Tired" (2021) (https://www.robinhobb.com/blog/archives/2021-05)
reply
TonyAlicea10
1 hour ago
[-]
Funny I made some very similar points awhile back in a blog post, thinking of it in terms of mode collapse: https://tonyalicea.dev/blog/single-mode-burnout/
reply
recursivedoubts
31 minutes ago
[-]
You are right to push back on that.
reply
thrymenarenot
15 minutes ago
[-]
It stresses me out for some reason and I'm just working on a hobby project.
reply
otter-in-a-suit
42 minutes ago
[-]
Relatable.

> with my colleague Douwe

Wait, meltano Douwe? Small world. Glad to see you're doing well. I always liked meltano.

> In an era when anyone can produce reasonable-looking UI

Identical looking slop? Every Claude-based vibe coded app looks identical.

> The fear of skill rot is legitimate. And the fear that if you don't go fast enough you'll be left behind is — while often overstated — not entirely unfounded.

You know what, that's OK. I just hit "OK" on LLM Scala code I _actually_ think is awful. It works. It's probably faster than the "pure" code I'd write by hand. The code I would write - as a FP and Scala/Elm/Haskell/... enjoyer - would actually be maintainable for humans, but LLMs struggle with it. But LLMs writing code for LLMs? Sure, have at it. Objectively lower barrier of entry.

> So if you're feeling overwhelmed, destabilized, simultaneously more productive and less happy, know that you're not alone.

But yes, I am indeed simultaneously more productive and less happy.

https://skaldmaps.com, my little side project, was only possible _because_ I was able to feed my real world knowledge about real estate, combined with GIS and SWE knowledge into various torment nexus... pardon me, LLM prompts.

Since I don't have the _time_ to write boilerplate react code (it's pepper and tomato season in Georgia, which _actually_ brings me joy), telling Claude/Codex/... how to write dbt models saves me time and I objectively get a lot more done, but it's not fun.

I guess that's also why I still enjoy blogging. You can't use LLMs for blogs without people noticing immediately. Shameless plug: https://chollinger.com/blog/

Enjoy my entirely human typos, since that's clearly rare these days.

reply
applfanboysbgon
1 hour ago
[-]
> The honest truth

> That loss is real and it's worth naming

I think I will not heed the first sentence and bear with this. What motivates people to do this? What do they get out of prompting Claude for some vapid "thought piece" and spamming it on the internet?

reply
greyface-
41 minutes ago
[-]
Clicks, views, attention. This blog is part of Pydantic's sales funnel.
reply
singingtoday
17 minutes ago
[-]
It got a lot of clicks here. Clicks equal money.
reply
hyperhello
41 minutes ago
[-]
It's just as easy to do the second one as the first one.
reply
jongjong
39 minutes ago
[-]
> That loss is real and it's worth naming

Yep classic Claude-ism.

The fact that this article was likely AI generated is the real load-bearing factor in this discussion. Or, as previous versions of Claude would say; it cuts through the heart of the issue.

reply
lardosaurusrex
49 minutes ago
[-]
"omg im so totally tired of ai u guiz lmao" proceeds to post claudeslop.
reply