I noticed at one point a few days ago that all 10 out of the top 10 articles on the front page were about AI or LLMs. Granted, that doesn't happen often, but wow. This craze is just unrelenting.
This is something I do regularly - count how many of the top 10 articles are AI-related. Generally it is 4-6 articles out of the 10 (currently it is 5). The other day it was 9.
Even 4-6 articles out of the top 10 for a single topic, consistently, seems crazy to me.
I have noticed the same and tbh it’s annoying as hell. But also to be honest, never before have humans been so determined to pour so much money, effort and attention into something you need a complicated soul to not interpret as utterly reckless. In a way, the AI thing is as exciting as going to the Coliseum to watch war prisoners gut each other, with the added thrill of knowing the gladiators will come out of the circle any minute to do the thing to the public, and you watch and fret and listen to the guy behind you gush about those big muscles on the gladiators which one day will be so good for building roads. It’s really hard to pass on it.
This site does pitch to developers. Rightly or wrongly the hype or what I think more accurately is the fear cycle is in LLM's/AI w.r.t SWE's. Given loss aversion in most people fear cycles are way more effective than hype ones in attracting long term interest and engagement.
I think many here, if people are being honest with themselves, are wondering what does this mean for their career, their ability to provide/live, and what this means for their future especially if they aren't financially secure yet. For tech workers the risk/fear that they are not secure in long term employment is a lot higher than it was 2 years ago; even if they can't predict how all of this will play out. For founders/VC's/businesses/capital owners/etc conversely the hype is there that they will be able to do what they wanted to do with less costs.
More than crypto, NFT, or whatever other hype cycle is - I would argue LLM's in the long term could be the first technology where the the tech worker demand may decline as a result despite the amount of software growing. The focus on AI labs in coding as their "killer app" does not help probably. While we've had "hype" cycles in tech its rarer to see fear cycles.
Like a deer looking at incoming headlights (i.e. I think AI is more of a fear cycle than hype cycle for many people) people are looking for any information related to the threat, taking away focus from everything else.
TL;DR While people are fearful/excited (depending on who) of the changes coming, and seeing the rate of change remains at current pace, IMO the craze won't stop.
My subjective impression is that it has become even more prominent in the past few months. I suspect the providers are feeling increased pressure to monetize and are boosting their astroturfing and creative marketing efforts accordingly.
After GPT-5 release I realized it's actually winding down quite significantly. I don't really know if it's actually the normal rate or the hype is really declining.