I worked fast food too, and I would have lost my shit trying to deal with something as unreliable, finnicky, and difficult as an LLM to do my job
personally i just hate using tech to do anything and would rather do stuff manually if possible. i rarely if ever find that tech makes my life easier
though i get your point. a fast food order is typically a pretty route and predictable type of conversation that would be ideal to automate with an LLM
Yeah, I get that inclination, but the annoying part here isn’t that it didn’t work, it’s that the system somehow wasn’t trained to think that a number of items higher than ten requires manual intervention.
Basically, some poor bastard (probably a intern too if I know anything about industry) software engineer forgot to or wasn’t told to program a notice limit into the software, thinking that they could automate the entire thing.
It’s frustrating because it’s such a simple thing to fix and yet somehow it was let into the wild without it. Like, they must have had meetings about this happening and yet it still happened. Extremely poor quality standards.
They probably had an intern generate and patch it using AI. The old “The risk isn’t AI taking your job, it is your boss hiring someone who can supposedly use AI to do your job because they don’t actually understand how anything works.”
I worked fast food too, and I would have lost my shit trying to deal with something as unreliable, finnicky, and difficult as an LLM to do my job
personally i just hate using tech to do anything and would rather do stuff manually if possible. i rarely if ever find that tech makes my life easier
though i get your point. a fast food order is typically a pretty route and predictable type of conversation that would be ideal to automate with an LLM
Yeah, I get that inclination, but the annoying part here isn’t that it didn’t work, it’s that the system somehow wasn’t trained to think that a number of items higher than ten requires manual intervention.
Basically, some poor bastard (probably a intern too if I know anything about industry) software engineer forgot to or wasn’t told to program a notice limit into the software, thinking that they could automate the entire thing.
It’s frustrating because it’s such a simple thing to fix and yet somehow it was let into the wild without it. Like, they must have had meetings about this happening and yet it still happened. Extremely poor quality standards.
Are we sure a human wrote the order taking software?
They probably had an intern generate and patch it using AI. The old “The risk isn’t AI taking your job, it is your boss hiring someone who can supposedly use AI to do your job because they don’t actually understand how anything works.”