The real thing about AI is not how fast it is to help you do something, but to open up the entire link for you.
Take it as a product - in the past, you had to pull the product manager, development, and testing team, first hold a requirements meeting, and then hold a technical review meeting, with countless back-and-forth torments of "who will do this" and "how do you understand that" in between. Product documentation, code architecture, test cases, version logs, every link must be watched and pushed.
Toss down? It starts in two weeks.
What now? Throw the requirements to AI, pull out the product documentation, set up the code framework, generate test cases, and set the version management rules - it only takes about ten minutes to complete the full set.
This feeling of multi-role collaboration being flattened with one click is the real dimensionality reduction blow.
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
16 Likes
Reward
16
4
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
SnapshotStriker
· 12-11 10:47
Oh, this is exactly what I've been wanting to say. The old meeting culture really was a waste of life.
But honestly, finishing the whole process in ten minutes? I'm a bit skeptical. Have you tried it?
AI is all about eliminating repetitive work, but the fine-tuning of details still can't be avoided.
It feels more like it accelerates the early stages, while the later debugging actually takes more time.
This thing is really a game-changer for small teams.
View OriginalReply0
LayerZeroHero
· 12-10 08:50
Damn, this is the real productivity revolution, and those who blew AI fast before didn't get the idea
View OriginalReply0
OffchainWinner
· 12-10 08:45
Indeed, this is the real killer feature of AI, not a single point optimization, but directly kills the cost of collaboration.
View OriginalReply0
0xOverleveraged
· 12-10 08:32
I have a deep experience that watching the product team around me redeem itself from the meeting hell in the past two years is indeed another dimension of efficiency. In the past, the cross-departmental tearing was really a black hole of time, but now it is directly thrown to AI, and when you look back, the framework is all alive, and people can free up their hands to make some interesting decisions. But to be honest, those who only nod in meetings are panicking now
The real thing about AI is not how fast it is to help you do something, but to open up the entire link for you.
Take it as a product - in the past, you had to pull the product manager, development, and testing team, first hold a requirements meeting, and then hold a technical review meeting, with countless back-and-forth torments of "who will do this" and "how do you understand that" in between. Product documentation, code architecture, test cases, version logs, every link must be watched and pushed.
Toss down? It starts in two weeks.
What now? Throw the requirements to AI, pull out the product documentation, set up the code framework, generate test cases, and set the version management rules - it only takes about ten minutes to complete the full set.
This feeling of multi-role collaboration being flattened with one click is the real dimensionality reduction blow.