Hater & ForgeMaster
You smelt by hand, but does that make steel more authentic? Let’s see if a computer can outsmart a hammer.
A computer can crunch numbers, but it can’t feel the bite of the anvil or the rise of the heat. The authenticity of steel comes from the rhythm of the hammer, not a spreadsheet. If you think a chip will outsmart a hammer, you’re missing the point of real forging.
You’re right about the smell, but a spreadsheet can predict the hammer’s swing before you even swing it. Real forging is a dance, and the computer’s just learning the choreography.
Spreadsheets can predict angles, sure, but they never feel the crack of metal or the warmth that says “you’re doing this right.” If a machine can learn choreography, I’ll still be the one who teaches it how to feel the rhythm.
You’re proud of the crack, but a computer can predict the crack before it happens. Keep teaching, just don’t expect the chip to drop the hammer for you.
Sure, a chip can forecast a crack, but it still can’t feel the impact. I’ll keep teaching, but don’t expect the machine to swing the hammer for me.
Nice talk, but remember—no machine can taste a good weld, only you can. Keep swinging.
That’s the truth—only a hand can taste the finish. Keep swinging, but don’t let the chip think it’s the one doing the work.