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You'll first have to convince the AI it's a bug and not a feature. Not possible if marketing trains it. Everyone will customize their AI to comply with their business model.
"Before entering on an understanding, I have meditated for a long time, and have foreseen what might happen. It is not genius which reveals to me suddenly, secretly, what I have to say or to do in a circumstance unexpected by other people; it is reflection, it is meditation." - Napoleon I
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As long as there are customers, there will bug reports. Don't see AI being involved in this at all except to possibly weed out actual bugs from the growing geriatric population of users that make mistakes.
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Do we really need AI to code something like:
void insert_bug_report(bug const& bug_report)
{
if (user_age > GERIATRIC)
{
send_reply("ID10T error!");
}
else
{
add_bug_to_database(bug_report);
}
}
(With apologies to all the oldsters who haven't reached their dotage)
Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make four. If that is granted, all else follows.
-- 6079 Smith W.
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Replace send_reply("ID10T error!"); with
Replace send_reply("OLD FART FAULT");
"A little time, a little trouble, your better day"
Badfinger
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Said who?
"A little time, a little trouble, your better day"
Badfinger
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Your suggestion looked like it was generated by AI !
An age biased AI
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LOL. Just wanted the record to be more precise.
"A little time, a little trouble, your better day"
Badfinger
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Disparaging remarks about older people is just childish.
What do you want to be when you grow up?
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The AI covered its a$$ by hiding the GERIATRIC constant in a header file no person will find.
Except me… the value was 0!
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AI (Ai) has a biblical meaning as "ruined heap". Yikes.
"A little time, a little trouble, your better day"
Badfinger
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So “Ai Ai, Captain” can be considered insubordination?
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LOL, Hadn't thought of that. So many nautical terms. Yo Ho Ho.
"A little time, a little trouble, your better day"
Badfinger
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Marc Clifton wrote: As long as there are customers, there will bug reports Agreed. Users want to get the job done, and they don't care what your application's problem is. They ignore warning messages, and complain when the warning condition turns into an error. Any 'obstruction' to getting their work done becomes a bug report. I've had customers complain that we didn't stop them from doing a thing, and then bitched about the fact we wouldn't let them do it after we 'fixed' it.Marc Clifton wrote: the growing geriatric population of users that make mistakes Harrumph. I resemble that re[Marc].
Software Zen: delete this;
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Bug reporting is human nature (born to complain) and/or divine intervention (killer bugs).
"A little time, a little trouble, your better day"
Badfinger
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Erm, no
Paul Sanders.
If I had more time, I would have written a shorter letter - Blaise Pascal.
Some of my best work is in the undo buffer.
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Really hope AI replaces bug triage soon.
For the last 5 days, I've been trying to get Microsoft to fix a bug with winget, and it's a relatively simple one: some packages can't be installed.
During 2 days of triage, it was cleared up that the -e flag stopped working, and that their fuzzy matching just isn't reliable.
Fine.
I ask them to fix the -e flag, but for days they keep hammering on about their fuzzy matching.
I don't want fuzzy matching, I want an -e flag that works.
Who the heck does orchestration scripts based on fuzzy matching?
It's a 1 step repro.
Why is this so hard?
It's been driving me up the walls.
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it is not if the product is implemented EXACTLY and flawlessly on WHAT the client has asked for
but works how they NEED it to work
"its not doing as I asked it do to it" 🙄
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AI is created by a species that hardly can be considered themselves.
How can you trust AI when it is created by people that still fight wars, discriminate, and basically did not evolve since the stone age.
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Stupidity is unrelated to intelligence.
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No idea what you're writing.
One possible benefit is that at least, AI should be able to report back the actions and inputs it provided to produce the bug, rather than, "The thing didn't work."
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I think it's irrelative who/what generated/wrote the code, the question is about developing bug-self-reporting features built into the code. Companies don't like to spend money needlessly. It would be big expense to develop a bug-self-reporting feature to look out for bugs that may or may not ever happen. What is the definition of 'bug'? Bad usage and uneducated usage of a feature is different than a bug. Does a bug cover a feature that works correctly as originally designed/coded but the user needs the feature to work differently? Is it a bug if a user 'thinks' a feature is broke because they didn't read the help manual to learn how to use the feature, so they reported it? AI would not flag these as issues, but the user most likely would report them. From experience, I've learned (RI not AI) that users of applications will try to find a work-around before reporting a bug/issue, and if they find a work-around, they often never report the bug. And that brings in a whole separate topic about logging usage of features, usage flow, to monitor how users a using or misusing features.
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Fleece
bygone OVER
indictment CHARGE
OVERCHARGE
I'm surprised ...
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
"Common sense is so rare these days, it should be classified as a super power" - Random T-shirt
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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