5/29/2026 at 3:17:35 PM
>Code review is a fantastic mechanism for catching bugs and sharing knowledge"Sharing knowledge" is one of the first phrases in the article, and highlighted as a key benefit of code review. But the loss to human-capital from this process is never examined in the post.
> Trivial reviews (typo fixes, small doc changes) cost 20 cents on average
They did around 25,000 of these runs (about 20% of total). So CF spent $5k in the period making language models run through PRs which were <10 lines long. I get that CF engineers are paid well, but the labour cost of having an intern/entry level engineer spend ~30-60s looking through these is likely close to $0.20, and that engineer builds some human-capital while they're at it.
by OtherShrezzing
5/29/2026 at 3:28:45 PM
the labour cost of having an intern/entry level engineer spend ~30-60s looking through these is likely close to $0.20Did you do the math? Your estimate feels way off. First, I doubt an intern would process one PR in 30s. Maybe 2-3 minutes, to read 10 lines carefully looking for typos and indentation mistakes. We pay interns close to $100K these days (in a company like CloudFlare), so that's ~80c/minute. My estimate is therefore closer to $1.6 per PR. About 10X.
You are correct that there is a residual value with the intern, over time they would start learning (a little bit) about the code base.
by alain94040
5/29/2026 at 6:53:19 PM
$100k is probably at the top end. Even at Cloudflare, interns are more likely to be making $25-40/hour according to levels.fyi, which works out to $52-83k.by MeetingsBrowser
5/29/2026 at 5:11:03 PM
Well, AI costs are definitely going to go down at least 90% in the next ~18 months for the same quality of output (and probably 90% again in the 24 months after).Are you sure it's going to make sense to pay someone to do that moving forward?
I don't think it's worth it now, by the way.
It's definitely not going to be worth it in the near future.
Can we even blink for $0.002? What happens when the next 90% increase in efficiency happens??
by onlyrealcuzzo
5/29/2026 at 7:31:11 PM
> Well, AI costs are definitely going to go down at least 90% in the next ~18 months for the same quality of output (and probably 90% again in the 24 months afterAs far as I can see, token costs have been steadily increasing over the past few months, so I’m not sure that buying the hype that another 90% cost reduction is just around the corner is warranted.
by FuckButtons
5/29/2026 at 11:24:35 PM
Doesn’t seem like token costs, specifically, are increasing.Opus cut its token pricing by 66% 6 months ago and it had previously been that higher price consistently for a year and a half (since that model launch).
GPT’s latest model is harder to track since it’s not named, but it’s historically inline with its history.
Not to mention what’s happening with other models like DeepSeek, GLM, and Kimi.
It seems to me the bigger change in costs is based on token appetite. People are discovering agentic capabilities are stronger than they used to be and use cases have broadened because of that. They’ll eventually discover too that these alternative models offer 95% of the intelligence at 20% of the price.
by wetoastfood
5/29/2026 at 7:39:45 PM
Is the price reduction in the room with us right now?by Zopieux
5/30/2026 at 3:05:53 AM
On local models that cost power (post initial hardware cost), makes sense. My work is building this out and I think it's solid. But until we can use our own hardware and local models the long term cost is a big question mark.by selicos
5/29/2026 at 6:03:33 PM
Would like to know where that 90% number comes from, and if it matches historical trend.by fg137
5/29/2026 at 6:11:53 PM
https://www.reddit.com/r/LocalLLaMA/comments/1gpr2p4/llms_co...See Chart 13 here: https://www.rdworldonline.com/ais-great-compression-20-chart...
See here: https://epoch.ai/data-insights/llm-inference-price-trends
LLMs are so comically inefficient compared to the human brain that it is pretty easy to imagine this trend continuing for several more 90% drops.
If LeCun's JEPA or GRAM turn out to be a thing, we could see a 3-4 order of magnitude drop in a single release cycle / generation.
Keep in mind that performance per watt on the hardware side - at the same time - is still doubling every ~24 months - and this doesn't factor that in.
by onlyrealcuzzo
5/29/2026 at 6:39:11 PM
[dead]by dingnuts
5/29/2026 at 8:12:14 PM
[dead]by notawhitemale