The Early Days of AI

(metorial.com)

21 points | by tobihrbr 12 hours ago

7 comments

  • kreetx 10 hours ago
    MCP isn't jQuery in the sense that it's supposed to be a standard or description of some sort, while currently isn't quite there yet: wrote about it from a brief reading here https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44386078.
  • wrs 11 hours ago
    For some reason this post refers to duct tape (or the brand of it called Duck Tape) as “Duktape”, which was confusing because Duktape is actually the name of a JavaScript runtime engine!
  • wrs 11 hours ago
    “Most people reading this” are under 25? Where’d you get that statistic?
  • behnamoh 11 hours ago
    > MCP is war.

    Alright, enough with this bs blog.

    • tobihrbr 11 hours ago
      The war part is more about the competing AI companies. It's meant to be an analogy to the "browser wars" (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Browser_wars). Not meant to be BS, I just wanted to use the terms that were used during the early days of browsers.
  • isoprophlex 12 hours ago
    is this slop? is this an ad? it's both!

    dont bother reading this. besides the overwrought statement in the title there is nothing novel or intellectually stimulating here, and it wants to sell you something.

    • jimbokun 11 hours ago
      It's an ad but the jQuery analogy is apt.

      Probably could have said it in much fewer words, though.

      • AznHisoka 11 hours ago
        >> Probably could have said it in much fewer words, though.

        So in other words, it's AI slop

    • tobihrbr 11 hours ago
      It's an honest opinion that I had put into a blog post. It's written by me, though I did use LLMs to review and improve it (no copy pasting). I still feel like the analogy between early browsers and the current state of AI stands. There is in a sense a war being fought out and there are emerging standard and there is lot's of glue around that to make it work.
      • mock-possum 8 hours ago
        For what it’s worth, I did think it was an interesting line of thought -

        The thing about LLM-generated content is that in order to get tracking it can’t look like it. Can’t read like it, can’t use the wording or the style of prose. It’s too much of a turnoff, it provokes revulsion.

        You’re better off doing the opposite - use the LLM to help you with your initial content, then finish it yourself, taking care to remove the ‘tells’

    • antoniojtorres 11 hours ago
      It has all the tells, em dashes as far as the eye can see, it even has the “Let me explain” from ChatGPT.
      • tobihrbr 11 hours ago
        I wrote the post in notion which converts "--" to emdashes automatically.
      • mock-possum 8 hours ago
        Also more than a few “it’s not X, it’s Y”
    • mock-possum 8 hours ago
      Isn’t it a rule that if you’re going to write about LLMs you have to use an LLM to do it?
    • didacusc 11 hours ago
      Thank you for saving me many minutes. It has happened more and more recently that 'interesting' headlines lead to AI slop blog posts and it just all feels like such a waste of time. Sad that content has degenerated in this way.
  • zer00eyz 12 hours ago
    A better comparison would be XML.

    What comes out of the other side will be better than what we have, but still not good... The next phase of XML agents is going to be its YAML age, better but not great, and we will just deal with it.

    • jimbokun 12 hours ago
      No, jQuery is a good analog for MCP. The author is absolutely right about the NxM -> N+M transition.
      • zer00eyz 10 hours ago
        No its not.

        People still use jQuery... if you think any one is going to use any of the ductape and baling wire builds we have today I have news for you.

        Everything we're building now is far more temporary, it's the DHTML/xhtml era.