If you've never used Rust before, I couldn't find good documentation on how to run a existing Rust project nor could I find `cargo install` on the "Getting Started" page. I could read the Cargo Book, or check `--help` I guess, but this can be surprisingly time consuming as well, it might take 5-30 minutes of active searching to locate the information. If you can, try put yourself in a beginner's mindset and think though your argument again.
Regarding your second point, I think people actually underutilise LLMs for simple tasks. Delegating these tasks frees up your problem-solving skills for challenges that truly need human insight. In this case, asking an LLM is arguably the smart choice: it's a common task in training data, easy to verify, and low-risk to run and not a direct learning or benefit for your initial question.
You don’t need to cargo install anything. You just need cargo itself, which is linked on the main page. Once you have that, here’s an example google search that gives you all the info you need to run the project (hint: `cargo run`)
Thanks for the Google link, I was just asking GPT-5-Pro "How to Google: 'How do I run a rust project'", and am still waiting for the answer... the point was that searching for an answer (wherever/however) is not necessary in some cases, like this one, but asking the AI agent to find a solution can be sufficient and is totally ok. Engineers are allowed to delegate, there is not nothing wrong with this.
Regarding your second point, I think people actually underutilise LLMs for simple tasks. Delegating these tasks frees up your problem-solving skills for challenges that truly need human insight. In this case, asking an LLM is arguably the smart choice: it's a common task in training data, easy to verify, and low-risk to run and not a direct learning or benefit for your initial question.