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For trivial setups this might work, but for anything sufficiently complex that actually hits on real complexity in the domain, it's hard to see any LLM doing an adequate job. Especially if the person driving it doesn't know what they don't know about the domain.


> For trivial setups this might work, but for anything sufficiently complex that actually hits on real complexity in the domain, it's hard to see any LLM doing an adequate job.

I mostly agree with this for now, but obviously LLMs will continue to improve and be able to handle greater and greater complexity without issue.

> Especially if the person driving it doesn't know what they don't know about the domain.

Sure, but if the person driving it doesn't know what they're doing, they're also likely to do a poor job buying a solution (getting something that doesn't have all the features they need, selecting something needlessly complex, overpaying, etc.). Whether you're building or buying a piece of enterprise software, you want the person doing so to have plenty of domain expertise.




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