I understand why Ai is dominating online discourse right now. The tech is novel, it’s pushing boundaries, the business side has trillions of dollars involved, and it’s made its way to the mainstream of every day people.
But, I just truly don’t find it interesting. For all those that do - great! But for myself, for whatever reason it just does not scratch that part of my brain. I’d rather spend days writing and debugging code (to create a 5 minute automation ;) ) than having Ai spit something out in 10 seconds.
I just use Ai like a supercharged stack overflow. Ask it something if I have a syntax error or whatever, and then move on by continuing to use my own brain to think through the logic and patterns of my project.
All that to say - I miss what HN was before Ai and LLMs started dominating everything!
Anyone have other spaces, blogs, communities, or whatever where you go to learn and/or discuss interesting things that don’t have anything to do with Ai?
leephillips5 days ago
“I miss what HN was before Ai and LLMs started dominating everything!”
This might be your solution:
jlengrand8 hours ago
Better, but the very first link I'm given is "Coursera to Combine with Udemy to Empower the Global Workforce with Skills for the AI Era" ^^
tim3334 days ago
I was thinking couldn't you just filter the AI stuff out. It normally seems to be less than 20% of items.
leephillips4 days ago
https://hn-ai.org/ features a quality index showing how much had to be filtered out.
rokoss214 days ago
Lobsters is the natural choice - thoughtful tech discussion with strong moderation against hype. Also worth checking: comp.lang.* Usenet groups (surprisingly active), Reddit's niche programming subreddits (r/rust, r/golang), and specialty forums like electro-tech-online.com for hardware folks.
The key difference: smaller communities attract people who are there for the craft, not engagement metrics.
firefax2 days ago
> Also worth checking: comp.lang.* Usenet groups (surprisingly active)
Do you know of a newbie friendly FAQ on how to access usenet in the modern era?
>Reddit's niche programming subreddits (r/rust, r/golang)
Even less niche places like /r/python seem pretty open to writing code by hand. (Though I like how python has libraries for many things)
gtirloni3 days ago
you can't join lobste.rs without begging though.
tomfox24 days ago
I also think just GPTs is not a good way for everyone.Now it's like google or something like google.But I relly need great agent in my life,like a real man,not AI.
krapp5 days ago
So far I've been able to keep it out of my various fediverse feeds and accounts.
skydhash5 days ago
Mailing lists for some of the stuff I use (Emacs, openbsd,...)