SAP changed something in their client which breaks all of our automation. Let's hope it's just a bug, otherwise we'll have to edit every single selector step in every single process to work with the new client, and that would be an absolute shitload of work.
A common complaint people working on open source projects have is that they're often viewed as part of the "supply chain" by corporations. They were never asked, it simply happened and suddenly they were burdened with a responsibility way beyond what they imagined.
Now, there are people telling project developers to step down rather than use LLMs. I share the misgivings many have about LLMs and their proponents, but this sort of demand reminds me a lot of the "supply chain" issue. The sheer entitlement, except it's coming from people rather than companies this time. You're shaming developers. You're calling any use of AI vibecoding and destroying the ability to have constructive discussions about this topic. You're declaring whole projects as slop, demeaning the hard and thankless work of all the contributors who got the project to its current state. It's easy to do all of this from the comfort of being a mere user who doesn't need to put in any of the work themselves. Maybe keep this in mind.
@catraxx All of this bullshit is the result of an environment designed to pit everyone against each other all the time. It's hard not to inadvertently become part of the problem yourself, and that includes me, too. I'm trying to be more mindful of my use of the site so it doesn't happen, but, well... some days it works better than others.
@catraxx I am not telling you or anybody to shut up, that's entirely not the point. I am angry that most of discourse on social media only happens in absolutes, from all fucking sides. This isn't just a problem when it comes to AI, it's merely the topic that's bringing out the pure essence of what's making social media such a devastating threat to our society.
The annoying and never ending discourse about AI is laying bare the sheer toxicity of social media and how it causes everyone to become entrenched in absolute positions