*grabs popcorn* yeah what could go wrong, your track record is so good you got this
Posts by YuzuCat
Executives are rarely gonna sign up to some of their most expensive employees taking time to not develop a new feature, but instead fix the existing foundational pieces. So more and more gets built on top of things originally made as temporary solutions.
TBH it's been going this direction even before AI. At my job I see lots of folks that are genuinely good at software development be forced to take shortcuts and make something bad that's functional because there's not enough time to make something good.
Though AI has made the problem WAY worse.
This face has crimes written all over it! Which is why you have to mask it!
That game is cooking, I’ve been playing it a good amount
*sigh*
Fuckboy Yuzu isn't real... he can't hurt you....
#AprilFools #fursuit #furry #spandex
📸: @turbowolf.space
ah does this mean I have to post fuckboy yuzu today
Fuckboy Fathom (nongendered) isn't real... they can't hurt you....
#AprilFools #Fathom #FursuitFriday
📸: @yuzucat.com
🪡: @lobitoworks.bsky.social
Happy trans day of visibility folks 🏳️⚧️ 🏳️⚧️ 🏳️⚧️
🔵: "Uh... wh-whoops?"
🟡: "Gah! We gotta fix this before anyone sees us!!"
...Their teamwork needs a bit of work, doesn't it?
#Commission for @tk-wolf.bsky.social featuring @yuzucat.com!
#furryart #furry #superhero
hello 👋 i have developed a new tool called blüuümpíi. blüuümpíi will convert every file on your hard drive to a .wav file without asking you, maximize your system volume, and play them on every bluetooth speaker you have ever connected to. if you offer feedback on blüuümpíi i will take legal action
Alexei, a purple reindeer anthro, enjoys looking at his reflection in the mirror. He's in a sleek spandex suit, featuring a light and dark blue suit with teal-green toes and gloves.
Art for @urboialexei.bsky.social, featuring him in a slinky new fit! Wanted to keep expanding my skills at spandex, and the 'bou was a perfect model!
#furry #spandex
swish swish! ✨
A way of abusing them yes
Remembering this amazing Isaac piece @kingtwitchus.bsky.social did for us afew years back 🔥
a ghost makes friends with a cat, but they can't touch. the last panel the cat is also a ghost and he has picked her up and is petting her and smiling
1-page comic
A yellow cat in a blue superhero spandex suit and mask stands with his hands on his hips in front of a bunch of lights. He wears black shoulder pads, gloves, and belt with pouches. He also wears a white scarf and con badges for BLFC.
Stopping by to check the comments of this one for sure
She couldn’t handle your constant yapping it seems
“I’m not dead, I’m just like, super tired…”
📸: @turbowolf.space
Jenny learned that she couldn't handle me pretty quickly 🐺✨
#FursuitFriday
taken by @yuzucat.com
I would try to stop you but I do not understand anything beyond popsicle
lending the braincell to others in this moment
*loud smacking noises* hold on a second! It trying to — ack brain freeze ;-;
A yellow cat in a blue superhero suit eating a popsicle.
Mmmmm popsicle
#fursuit #furry #spandex #VancouFur #FursuitFriday
They can prompt an AI in places like code reviews, but a lot of my experience as a junior was pair programming and asking lots of questions about the team and processes and all that
Which happens in person a lot or over calls a lot
You’re already on a good path by having some coding skill without LLMs. A difference between school and a coding job is that people are going to ask you lots of questions about the decisions you made, so understanding your own code is very necessary.
Folks leaning on AI can’t answer those.
In terms of what junior devs should be doing in terms of jobs that require them to heavily use LLMs?
I think that putting some time and effort into learning the code that’s being touched if you’re not familiar with it is going to pay dividends.
I think that a lot of people using these AI coding agents are going to eventually be making bad code without really knowing it, because it takes a lot of thought and effort to think though a problem to know what a good solution could even look like.
The more I interact with AI coding agents the less I am starting to fear. I think the reason it felt like magic when I started to use it at work was because I have spent years building my knowledge about the systems in place to the point where I can quickly tell what looks right and what doesn't.
It is. I deeply feel you. I hope it all ends up backfiring for the companies who decide to rely on LLMs the most.