If you're not a developer, or you're just starting out, or you only knew one area of software, AI is amazing for you. You can build things you could never build before. If you're experienced, you're just way faster now. Both are great.
I think we can use that same energy on learning new things too. Not just using AI to write code, but using it to understand things we never had time to understand before. Reading more. Going deep on new domains. Building actual knowledge.
For example, if you're a software person who always wanted to learn hardware, this is the best time to do that. AI can walk you through circuits, explain datasheets, help you debug firmware. Stuff that used to take years of context to even get started with.
LLMs might be the best learning tool ever created, but we're mostly using it to skip the learning. I do believe coding agents are perfect for this job!
I started doing this lately. I use Claude Code less for "build this for me" (I still do build a lot) and more for "help me understand this." It's been really satisfying.
Curious how others here use agents outside of coding. Are you using them to learn? To read? To explore new fields? What's working for you?
The risk, in my opinion was the opposite of I'd expected — not learning less, but a lot of shallow things giving an impression of learning which in effect isnt there. Look! i built this powerful thing. 60.000 Lines of coded business logic in a week! On the surface i have something impressive to show. People admire it, and i end up believing that i did it. This is not to say that i did not learn - i did, but my learning was not as impressive as the result would make you believe.
Maybe i should try using it to learning Math now.
- SEO audits (checking structured data, hreflang across 25 language versions) - Batch blog translations (40 articles × 25 languages) - Performance debugging (found that our entire SSR body was empty, LazyAuthProvider with ssr:false was wrapping all content) - Admin dashboard analytics queries
The biggest unlock was giving it a good CLAUDE.md with workflow rules. It stops asking permission and starts fixing things autonomously.
Building a browser-based file tools product and CC handles probably 80% of the iteration cycle at this point.
> Don't post generated comments or AI-edited comments. HN is for conversation between humans.
https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html
I never gave a thought to the Thirty Years War only to find later it was necessary for my existence. And all the invasions of Ireland, from the Danes to Cromwell. And the expulsion of the Acadians in Canada. And cousin-lovin. It’s the last rabbit hole you’ll ever need to descend…
I also use it to help me learn to cook more/better so I ask it questions about the how / why and have made a database of recipes that I tweak based on interests / abilities.
A neat thing is you can always ask AI - what can I do to eat or cook better? Then you do it and keep repeating.