Comment by antonvs

Comment by antonvs a day ago

4 replies

> Anyone who claims AI is great is not building a large or complex enough app

That might be true for agentic coding (caveat below), but AI in the hands of expert users can be very useful - "great" - in building large and complex apps. It's just that it has to be guided and reviewed by the human expert.

As for agentic coding, it may depend on the app. For example, Steve Yegge's "beads" system is over a quarter million lines of allegedly vibe-coded Go code. But developing a CLI like that may be a sweet spot for LLMs, it doesn't have all the messiness of typical business system requirements.

proc0 21 hours ago

Anything above a simple app and it becomes a tradeoff that needs to be carefully tuned so that you get the most out of it and it doesn't end up being a waste of time. For many use cases and domain combinations this is a net positive, but it's not yet consistent across everything.

From my experience it's better at some domains than others, and also better at certain kinds of app types. It's not nearly as universal as it's being made out to be.

znsksjjs a day ago

> For example, Steve Yegge's "beads" system is over a quarter million lines of allegedly vibe-coded Go code. But developing a CLI like that may be a sweet spot

Is that really a success? I was just reading an article talking about how sloppy and poorly implemented it is: https://lucumr.pocoo.org/2026/1/18/agent-psychosis/

I guess it depends on what you’re looking to get out of it.

  • jsight 11 hours ago

    I'd say it is a success at being useful, but yeah it does seem like the code itself has been a bit of a mess.

    I've used a version that had a bd stats and a bd status that both had almost the same content in slightly different formats. Later versions appear to have made them an alias for the same thing. I've also had a version where the daemon consistently failed to start and there were no symptoms other than every command taking 5 seconds. In general, the optimization with the daemon is a questionable choice. It doesn't really need to be _that_ fast.

    And yet, even after all of that it still has managed to be useful and generally fairly reliable.

  • antonvs a day ago

    I haven't looked into it deeply, but I've seen people claiming to find it useful, which is one metric of success.

    Agentic vibe coding maximalists essentially claim that code quality doesn't matter if you get the desired functionality out of it. Which is not that different from what a lot of "move fast and break things" startups also claim, about code that's written by humans under time, cost, and demand pressure. [Edit: and I've seen some very "sloppy and poorly implemented" code in those contexts, as well as outside software companies, in companies of all sizes. Not all code is artisanally handcrafted by connoisseurs such as us :]

    I'm not planning to explore the bleeding edge of this at the moment, but I don't think it can be discounted entirely, and of course it's constantly improving.