> The process is simple enough that you can let non-technical people build something like this via a no-code interface. No-code tools can leverage this to let their users define “backend” functionality.
Early prototypes of software can use simple prompts like this one to become interactive. Running an LLM every time someone clicks on a button is expensive and slow in production, but probably still ~10x cheaper to produce than code.
Early prototypes of software can use simple prompts like this one to become interactive. Running an LLM every time someone clicks on a button is expensive and slow in production, but probably still ~10x cheaper to produce than code.
Hah wow... no. Definitely not.