Task Paralysis and AI

(g5t.de)

29 points | by MrGilbert 5 hours ago

6 comments

  • cl0ckt0wer 2 minutes ago
    AI has replaced video games for me. And there are plenty of cheaper models that "do it" for me, I don't have to spend $$$$ just for entertainment. I will step up to the frontier for serious work. But if I'm just playing, I'm going for the free stuff on openrouter.

    Also, ai art is fine. It looks better than me using paint. That said, there are plenty of foss art pieces and public domain that you can leverage if all you really need is placeholders, and that is much cheaper.

  • pllbnk 48 minutes ago
    So the end game for the current generation of AI companies won't be productivity improvements but gambling, just like everything else nowadays. That's why they want to get us all into these massive casinos they call data centers and don't want us to own the slot machines.

    So what that you have ideas - other people have them too. It's not ideas that build businesses but knowing right people or ability to sell products.

    • stavros 28 minutes ago
      The gambling trope is so tired. AI development doesn't involve luck to any appreciable degree, certainly not more than hiring people to do a job can be considered "gambling" (you never know what you're going to get!).

      It's just paying to get stuff done, which is how it's always been, since the dawn of man.

      • mrbungie 1 minute ago
        The gambling part is because of the (hopefully emergent and not purposefully designed) intermittent reinforcement due to the limits. You don't get that with regular hires.
  • Weryj 1 hour ago
    I could have written this article myself.

    The addiction part, the ADHD part and the pending test part.

    The fear of becoming addicted to AI is real and I don't think I'll be capable to stop it, considering we're asking people who struggle with avoiding quick dopamine to use it professionally in their daily work life.

    My Pro went to Max(5) to Max(20) pretty quickly and I was burning through that weekly limit still, without large agentic workflows that burn tokens. Just me and 4-5 terminals. Sometimes I was happy to hit the limit because I was forced back to normal life.

    I've gone back to Pro to stop what was happening.

    Now I'm self-aware enough to notice the trend and put up safe guards, but that's because I've always had to adapt my environment to control my behaviour because I know direct behaviour control is abnormally challenging. I fear for those who won't see it coming, until they're in deep.

    • MrGilbert 0 minutes ago
      > [...] considering we're asking people who struggle with avoiding quick dopamine to use it professionally in their daily work life.

      It's so wild that it never dawned on me, why some people around me where so quick with the "let AI do that!". I'm not saying that each and everyone has ADHD, but I think I underestimated a) the flow of dopamine a successful prompt can set free and b) the craving for it by folks that I deemed more stable than myself.

    • willwade 40 minutes ago
      I find that the new "drug" is constantly hunting down new cheaper models.. z.ai/glm, mistral, deepseek.. if you need to get your fix - find the cheaper path..
  • p0w3n3d 20 minutes ago

      > What is it good for?
      > For me, personally? It helps me overcome my task paralysis. As mentioned earlier: I have a plan. A strategy. An idea. I just need someone (or something), who has fun in churning through the implementation. I have the ideas. But boy is coding exhausting. 
    
    I find the same. AI helps me overcome any paralysis. I just think "hey it's cheap to write the prompt" and go on.
  • sourcecodeplz 51 minutes ago
    It is really weird reading things but I guess normal? It seems many feel this, including me. AI just compounds this behavior even more! Darn.
  • Ozzie-D 1 hour ago
    [flagged]