There’s definitely a story there. And you could pair it with aggressively cutesy children’s-story illustrations from MJ or DALL-E 3, which I bet they could do quite well. Maybe use Claude-2 to go for Shel Silverstein rhyming story.
Probably off-topic, but I can’t help but notice that the supposed moral of the story is, in fact, empirically wrong:
The techniques required for these traditional computer science applications don’t work as well for embedded applications. The toaster is one example. A toaster is not a Breakfast Food Cooker. Any attempt to make it one just leads to a product that is over budget, behind schedule, too expensive to sell at a profit, and too confusing to use. When faced with a difficult problem, the proper approach is to try to make the problem simpler, not more complicated.
But in fact toaster ovens exist, they are precisely the result of taking a toaster and turning it into a Breakfast Food Cooker, and they’re excellent appliances—very useful, very simple and easy to use, and sold at a profit by many manufacturers today!
There’s definitely a story there. And you could pair it with aggressively cutesy children’s-story illustrations from MJ or DALL-E 3, which I bet they could do quite well. Maybe use Claude-2 to go for Shel Silverstein rhyming story.
I would write it as Douglas Adams fanfiction, involving the Sirius Cybernetics Corporation.
Or perhaps an update of this, with the twist that the “software developer” is just relaying the words of an AI.
Probably off-topic, but I can’t help but notice that the supposed moral of the story is, in fact, empirically wrong:
But in fact toaster ovens exist, they are precisely the result of taking a toaster and turning it into a Breakfast Food Cooker, and they’re excellent appliances—very useful, very simple and easy to use, and sold at a profit by many manufacturers today!