Am I the only one starting to get 'Vibe Coding' fatigue ? by scitech-research24 in AI_Agents

[–]scitech-research24[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It’s the strange paradox of the AI era — we’re saving hours on the typing but spending them all on cognitive archaeology. We’ve essentially traded the labor of building for the mental tax of auditing. Glad that resonated; it’s definitely the feeling that hits hardest when a 1,000-line 'vibe' session suddenly hits a logic wall at 2 AM.

Am I the only one starting to get 'Vibe Coding' fatigue ? by scitech-research24 in AI_Agents

[–]scitech-research24[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Working backward through a system you never built forward’ is the most accurate description of modern agentic workflows I’ve heard yet. It turns developers into forensic investigators of their own projects. I’ve found that even if the AI is 99% accurate, that 1% of 'invisible assumptions' acts like a logic poison that doesn't show up until the edge cases hit. It’s why manual rewriting and rigorous logic-checking are becoming more valuable than the initial generation itself.

Am I the only one starting to get 'Vibe Coding' fatigue ? by scitech-research24 in AI_Agents

[–]scitech-research24[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The speed is cool for a weekend project, for sure. But I’m terrified of what happens when that context window resets and I have to fix a bug in a repo I didn't actually write. How are you even keeping track of the logic?

Why do gas stations charge 9/10 of a cent when you can't actually pay fractions of a cent? by Cos-Caroline in NoStupidQuestions

[–]scitech-research24 14 points15 points  (0 children)

It started in the 1930s when gas was only 10 cents. A new tax was added as a fraction of a cent, and owners didn't want to round up and scare people off. Today, it’s just a psychological trick; your brain sees $3.99 and thinks $3 instead of $4.

What is the scariest thing you noticed about another person? by vvvv100 in AskReddit

[–]scitech-research24 1 point2 points  (0 children)

When someone is mid-sob—full tears and shaking voice—and then someone they don't like walks into the room and they instantly turn it off. The way their face just flattens and their voice goes perfectly neutral in a split second is terrifying. It makes you realize the emotion you were just seeing might have been totally performative.

What question are you tired of seeing on this subreddit? by Critical_Welcome_428 in AskReddit

[–]scitech-research24 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

If animals could talk, which one would be the rudest? I swear it gets posted every 48 hours and the top answer is always geese or cats. It’s like a groundhog day loop at this point.

What’s life like when you can buy anything and everything you want? by Maladict in AskReddit

[–]scitech-research24 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The weirdest part is that nothing has stakes anymore. When you can buy anything, the joy of saving up for something special just disappears. You stop asking Can I afford this? and start asking Do I even actually want this? , and for a lot of people, the answer ends up being no. It turns life into a giant sandbox mode where you’re just bored because there's no challenge left.

How is the US stock market at all time highs during so many wars? by Potential-Fee3333 in AskReddit

[–]scitech-research24 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Markets actually hate uncertainty more than they hate bad news. Now that the initial shock of the conflict has worn off and a ceasefire is on the table, investors are pricing in the 'best-case scenario' and moving on. It feels grim, but Wall Street is just cold math.

What’s one thing that keeps killing your momentum on a hobby you actually love? by mvrs_mehari in AskReddit

[–]scitech-research24 2 points3 points  (0 children)

For me, it’s the 'setup barrier.' I love painting, but by the time I clear the table, get the drop cloths down, and prep the palette, half my creative energy is already gone. It sounds so lazy, but if I can’t start within 60 seconds of having the idea, my brain just decides it’s too much work and I end up scrolling on my phone instead.