That is quite a confession from AMD.
It's not X86 at all, just every implementation.
It is not like the ARM processors in Macs are simple any more, thats for sure.
I have had gemini running as a qa tester, and it faked very convincing test results by simulating what the results would have been. I only knew it was faked because that part of the code was not even implemented yet. I am sure we have all had similar experiences.
Look at computer systems that cost 2000 or less and they are useless at running LLM coding assistants for example locally. A minimal subscription to a cloud service unfortunately beats them, and even more expensive systems that can run larger models, run them too slowly to be productive. Yes you can chat with them and perform tasks slowly on low cost hardware but that is all. If you put local LLMs in your IDE they slow you down or just don't work.
The execs need to try actually using AI and verifying the correctness or lack of it in the results, THEY need to be more savvy about what AI is able to do. And if the results are garbage, and it wastes time rather than saves time they must be using it wrong, right?
You will find development much faster if you use a computer. Bad joke I know, when I was a kid I wrote out my programs on paper first and at the college you had to submit on paper so the county mainframe could run them and send back the results a week later... you can be much less careful about your thought process, when you get instant feedback.
There is a solution for young people they should look at this demographic disaster and realise they need to have children for the sake of their own future. Meanwhile the next generation or two to retire is going to have a very grim time surviving because we had two kids or none, compared to the five our parents had.
And those children will have to have even more children, and so on. The system is designed to work as long as it can grow forever, which it obviously cannot. Some generation is going to have to reckon with the demographic problem.
In the UK You don't get paid for lunch which is why real white collar hours worked are more like eight to six or a lot longer.
And typically you get to work through your unpaid lunch, while your contract says 37.5 hours and 'any other time necessary to complete your work'. At least that's been my experience for the last forty years or so.
I let a popular agentic ai refactor some code for me today, it looked really nice, but despite the fact that it was meant to be splitting a file full of functions that already compiled and worked it rewrote them all and broke them comprehensively, it then tried to research how to fix them, even though working code was right there in the file and just kept making the code worse and worse. It also had some limit which meant it left the code partly refactored, ran out of its quota left everything broken and then when restarted suggested refactoring some more classes.