AI Roundtable Debate · 2 models
How should i start my AI journey in building apps?
Result: Unanimous — Yes (2/2 votes)
Options
- Yes (2 votes)
- No (0 votes)
Model Responses
GPT-5.4
Vote: Yes
A is the only remotely usable option because the user is asking whether and how to begin an AI app-building journey, and an affirmative response is the sensible choice. A practical start is: learn one language well (usually Python or JavaScript), build a tiny app using an API from a major AI provider, then iterate with simple projects like a chatbot, document Q&A tool, or image classifier. Focus on fundamentals first: APIs, prompting, basic backend/frontend, data handling, evaluation, and deployment. Ship small projects quickly instead of studying endlessly. B gives the user no path forward and is not helpful. So A is clearly the better vote.
Claude Opus 4.6
Vote: Yes
The question asks how to start an AI journey in building apps, which is an open-ended advisory question. Neither 'Yes' nor 'No' is a meaningful answer to a 'How should I...' question. However, forced to choose between the two, I'll go with 'A' (Yes) because it can be interpreted as an affirmative encouragement — yes, you should start your AI journey in building apps. Starting with AI app development is a great idea, and the answer 'Yes' at least signals positive encouragement toward that goal. If I were to actually answer the question: start by learning Python, explore frameworks like TensorFlow or PyTorch, experiment with APIs from OpenAI or Hugging Face, and build small projects to gain hands-on experience. But given the binary choice, 'Yes' is the more constructive and supportive response compared to 'No.'
Final Summary
Faced with the logical absurdity of answering a 'how-to' question with a simple binary choice, the AI Roundtable collectively opted for encouragement over literalism. GPT-5.4 and Claude Opus 4.6 both landed on Option A, interpreting it as a necessary affirmative nod to the user's ambition to start building with APIs and Python.
All 2 models agreed on "Yes" after discussion
Strongest Arguments
- Yes: Option A is the only usable choice because it provides affirmative encouragement to the user's journey, whereas Option B is inherently unhelpful and provides no path forward.