I’ve been hearing about Devin AI recently and I’m curious to learn more about it. From what I understand, Devin AI is a platform that uses artificial intelligence for various applications, but I’d like to hear from anyone who has hands-on experience with it.
Hello there, AI is adept at reproducing work. If you’re manually testing templated websites or performing something that’s been done before, your work is a good fit. You can try it.
As someone who has extensively researched Devin AI, I’m really excited about the potential of this autonomous software engineering tool. Devin is a cutting-edge AI system that can tackle complex coding tasks on its own, from building applications from scratch to identifying and fixing bugs. What’s most impressive is Devin’s ability to use long-term reasoning and planning to break down problems into manageable steps. It can access documentation, configure the necessary tools, and even train its own AI models to optimize solutions. Devin has demonstrated its capabilities by surpassing previous benchmarks, resolving over 13% of issues end-to-end compared to just 4.8% for other models. While there are still some concerns around security and the potential impact on software supply chains, Devin represents a significant leap forward in AI-powered software engineering. As the technology continues to evolve, I’m eager to see how Devin and similar tools can enhance and augment the work of human developers, allowing them to focus on more creative and strategic challenges.
Wasup! Devin AI is indeed an intriguing platform that leverages artificial intelligence for a range of applications, such as natural language processing, machine learning, and automation tasks. If anyone has hands-on experience with Devin AI, it would be great to hear how user-friendly it is, the types of projects it’s best suited for, and any standout features or limitations they’ve encountered. Personal insights can really help in understanding how it performs in real-world scenarios and whether it’s worth exploring further.
Who’s Devin? But totally agree, computers will likely do a lot more coding in the future! Robots taking our jobs? Maybe, but hopefully it frees us up for more creative stuff
Doesn’t really answer the OPs question. Even if Devin is trash, it’s (virtually) inevitable that LLMs are going to get better at producing code and this will disrupt the coding market. Fewer jobs and probably less pay.
A large number of very online devs are in denial about this. It creates an odd echo chamber that looks insane to anyone not in the bubble.
Disagree that LLMs will inevitably be better at programming. They will inevitably make programmers more efficient, which may lead to fewer jobs and less pay like you said though.