• @Lime66@lemmy.world
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    8016 days ago

    Inaccurate. That house has decent structural integrity despite being a cruel joke made by the architect, vibe code could never

  • davad
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    16 days ago

    Hmm, I dunno if that’s a fair comparison. That house might be structurally sound and just look weird.

    • @roofuskit@lemmy.world
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      1516 days ago

      A vibe coder’s house equivalently would have collapsed on the person who purchased it as soon as the closed the door behind them.

  • @Donkter@lemmy.world
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    2516 days ago

    Does it stay up? Yes.

    Can you sleep in it? Technically

    Does it have running electricity and water? (Optional anyway)

    Another big win for vibe coders. Pack it up, we’re taking the W home.

    • @twopi@lemmy.ca
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      214 days ago

      In this market absolutely. One could easily flip it to $500k in a couple days.

      • @Tja@programming.dev
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        114 days ago

        Well, if all “AI houses” suddenly cost 5k all around, you wouldn’t flip it, but I would gladly live in one of them if I can stop paying rent/mortgage.

  • Avid Amoeba
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    1016 days ago

    Talking to my structural engineer friend about the way we build software makes him sad every time. And I’m not even talking about vibe coding. Yet.

      • @MonkderVierte@lemmy.zip
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        215 days ago

        You absolutely can regex (some) html if you sanitize and maybe convert it beforehand.

        Btw, why are parsers always built to support the whole thing and maybe throw an error on or just consume unsupported shenanigans? That’s how you get security vulnerabilities in picture formats. Instead of just picking the things you support and ignoring the rest.

        • @squaresinger@lemmy.world
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          315 days ago

          You always have to balance: Do you want the user to have “some” user experience, or none at all.

          In the case of image viewers or browsers or stuff, it’s most often better to show the user something, even if it isn’t perfect, than to show nothing at all. Especially if it’s an user who can’t do anything to fix the broken thing at all.

          That said, if the user is a developer who is currently developing the solution, then the parser should be as strict as possible, because the developer can fix stuff before it goes into production.

  • SatansMaggotyCumFart
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    816 days ago

    This looks like a real house and I’m pretty sure it’s not built by a vibe coder so I call shenanigans.

  • Sal
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    716 days ago

    That house looks like it’s begging to be mercy killed.

    • Deebster
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      115 days ago

      I’m not sure I understand your reply, but if your second sentence is saying that this image is AI-generated then you might like to know that this building is in Belgium and there’s other photos online.

  • FuglyDuck
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    516 days ago

    I kinda like escher’s work…. And this is giving off those vibes…

      • FuglyDuck
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        1015 days ago

        I was kinda referring to the impossible shapes and dimensional illusions Escher used. Like this one:

        • @grue@lemmy.world
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          215 days ago

          Sure, I could see that. But on the other hand, this is ostensibly a photo of a building that exists IRL, so clearly it can’t be topologically impossible in an Escher-esque way.