Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin

No, that's not what this analogy is about. At all.

See, table saws are dangerous. Famously so. One of, if not the most dangerous tools available to the general public. They spin quickly with lots of torque and pull things in faster than you can react. Pressure can also send loose pieces of wood backwards at high speed. Fast enough to pass through a person sometimes. It's like being hit with an arrow.

Tablesaw accidents can remove fingers and hands instantly, puncture organs.

They can be used safely but they're circumstantial, the worst thing you can do with a table saw is experiment. Once you realise there's a 12-inch razor sharp blade spinning at 3000rpm with up to 5HP you begin to respect how dangerous it could be and want to warn others.

It's intentionally hyperbolic. But you see what I'm saying here?



> the worst thing you can do with a table saw is experiment.

And yet, that's very much exactly what happened, well predating the table saw; look into steam engines belt driving saw pit blades for logging.

The table saw itself has evolved in many ways, there's a handheld angle grinder with various blades sub tree.

These attachments: https://www.arbortechtools.com/au/shop-online/power-carving/...

are the literal evolution of wrapping chainsaw about discs on an angle grinder: https://www.afr.com/companies/an-inventor-cuts-in-big-time-p...

It's hard to be hyperbolic about danger and spinning objects, blades, chains after looking into the crazy world of farmers and military civil engineers; a shed built whipper snipper for young trees in a plantation to clean rows made out of chains welded to a tractor rim spinning horizontally hanging down behind rig on small tractor and driven by the PTO is not the scariest thing I've seen.

Long story short, people using tools often make and evolve their own tools to better do their work - and sometimes iterations of those proto-tools are kinda super bloody sketchy. There is care to be taken, there will be close calls.


> PTO

I know GP said "available to general public", but my mind went straight to PTO after reading "One of, if not the most dangerous tools". Less common to see (especially in cities) than saws, but I think larger proportion of people understand they have to be careful near table saws than PTO shafts.

> after looking into the crazy world of farmers and military civil engineers

The whole history of aviation and space exploration is chock full of engineers, physicists and chemists doing crazy levels of experimentation.

That said, my point was different - unlike GP, I ask to consider workshops that had extensive experience with dangers of powered or high mechanical leverage hardware. It's entirely plausible and reasonable for people running those shops to say, "here is the new dangerous power tool, it's obviously pretty useful (ask your friends at $X or $Y if you don't see it), figure out how and where to best work it into our specific workflows, so it makes us most bang for the buck".


I think this is still a perfectly decent analogy for LLMs.

The danger may not be "personal injury before you can react", but it is both parts separately, as there's reports of them giving unsafe advice and also of them performing undesired tasks faster than humans can react.

https://techcrunch.com/2026/02/23/a-meta-ai-security-researc...

For everyday tragedy: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deaths_linked_to_chatbots#Over...

For mass devastation and warcrimes: https://futurism.com/artificial-intelligence/us-military-elo...

(That said: while I regard "AI doom is marketing hype" to be a conspiracy theory when applied to OpenAI and Anthropic, public statements from this guy are absolutely a case where I'd say hyping up destructive power is the point of his job: https://www.ai.mil/About/Leadership/Bio-Page/Article/3940370...)




Consider applying for YC's Fall 2026 batch! Applications are open till July 27.

Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: