| Aug 12 |
It's really a shame how quickly "skill issue" went from useful concept to term used to weasel out of making a good argument. Basically let's people get away with rebutting as a 7 year old would.
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| Aug 12 |
As an aside - simple sinatra codebase hooked in to Hatchbox is so nice - 10 seconds from git push to live.
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2 |
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195 |
106 |
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| Aug 12 |
The @hatchboxio team keeping their prices at $10/month is the saas equivalent of the 99c Arizona Iced Tea. Such a great deal.
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| Aug 09 |
I really need to share my side projects more.
I've seen a few people ask for a no-build version of Tailwind recently - I happened to build one a few years ago that still works pretty well - link below
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| Aug 07 |
cc @colmtuite
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| Aug 07 |
I should issue a retraction here. These are much more common than "at the OS level and some native apps" - I haven't used one in a long time, but I've noticed them around a lot more now they're on my radar, to be fair.
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| Jul 31 |
Recruiting is a great example of the limits of structured data - I remember when the internet was taking off and there was lots of talk about how middle men like recruiters and real estate agents were dust, because now everyone had “perfect information”. There’s no such thing as perfect information. There are enormous databases listing skills, experiences and qualifications for hundreds of millions of people. And yet hiring for knowledge work is still a complete black box. Many making the same mistake when it comes to AI
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| Jul 26 |
@colmtuite I'd take the opposite side of that bet (>50% of web apps use multi level dropdowns).
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| Jul 26 |
@colmtuite Figma was the one that sprang to mind. I'd put all of those apps (linear, notion, slack, messenger) in a particular category - don't have the language but something that approximates massive surface area/huge company and extremely high interactivity. So fair - my original…
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| Jul 26 |
Something I find super odd - a lot of components you see design engineers obsessing over - you almost never see in real products. The multi-level dropdown is a great example - the only place these menus persist in most UIs today are at the OS level or for some native apps and that's about it. But they're one of the first things in every component library.
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| Jul 22 |
@colmtuite 😂 many such cases
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| Jul 22 |
Hot take: It should not be legal to run a consumer facing middle man business and not hold responsibility for the end product.
Side point: The on demand apps have the leech-iest business models. Capture the customer, provide nothing more than a UI, squeeze the service provider https://t.co/ZwgsU4aogI
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| Jul 22 |
@adamwathan preact standalone?
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| Jul 22 |
Git workflows are still one of the biggest barriers to agentic coding. @gitbutler has been working on tech for years that just so happens to solve the problem beautifully. Love this
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| Jul 20 |
@kingsley_kelly @Replit Sure but that’s not the point I was making. If you use replit it very quickly feels like the people building it don’t actually use it themselves, because there are so many obvious first-run things to be addressed. Case in point it took a super high profile person tweeting about… https://t.co/DN8ARv8rZ3
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| Jul 14 |
@robotiguy Most of our codebases (except for you guys 😁) aren't written in javascript, so it's just not something we need. It's an optional addition which many developers prefer and which is particularly useful in large js heavy codebases with many contributors (keeps things organised).…
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| Jul 14 |
We have 10+ codebases with no typescript and AI can reliably contribute perfectly fine but thanks
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| Jul 02 |
@wycats I find this thread confusing - it doesn’t really explain how an MCP server scoped to one user’s account could actually access the transfer_app function on another account, and kind of implies that it was too confusing to even figure out (spent days, had to disable). Is there…
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| Jul 02 |
JavaScript developers man
Very little discussion about the trade offs or when adding a new obfuscation layer makes sense, just dogmatic “here’s the newest best practice that everyone should be using”
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398 |
200 |
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| Jul 02 |
There's a building in Amsterdam that looks like a big @kit office. Today I remembered ConvertKit are remote - turns out it's a museum that has an almost identical logo - very confusing. https://t.co/d8qnJ7RUSt
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| Jul 02 |
😂 Imagine being a brand designer when every startup is obsessed with the same color palette. https://t.co/S1ViRPHC39
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| Jun 27 |
What’s hilarious is this was my exact qualm when I went to America. Every app - DoorDash, Uber, Airbnb, https://t.co/LqhEbk4rly - you see one price and then when you check out it’s 30% higher. What places/countries are people visiting in Europe with this problem?
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| Jun 27 |
Interest piqued with the first line - “oh wow someone managed to vibe code an app that makes real money”
Nope, turns out its a “$1.7m Saas” because that’s what replit told him it would cost to build it 🙃
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| Jun 26 |
This is one of the best finished AI products I’ve seen - the conversation tone, personality, the way the AI guides the chat - you can tell it wasn’t just “let’s just wire together the APIs and get it out there”. The app also gets the important details right. Very impressive
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| Jun 26 |
@GitBookIO @mintlify Thanks for the response - the use case is showing live examples of our components (it's a css library) - I looked through the integrations but I don't think there's anything there. I'll keep my eyes peeled for an iframe block, thanks!
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| Jun 24 |
@Replit Workflows, run commands, nixfiles. None of it works out of the box, no feedback on what's happening, preview still displays old (cached?) version https://t.co/7o9B7oujba
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| Jun 24 |
I was an early fan of and believer in @replit but nowadays whenever I use it I always end up sinking at least an hour into debugging - it's a great example of a product that feels the opposite of delightful/polished. Such a shame
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| Jun 22 |
@jmduke @GitBookIO I’m still a bit torn, spent a few days playing with vuepress and a few others but decided that docs weren’t the core product so I didn’t want to lose time. Also had a self rolled one for a while. For me the markdown editor experience was what ended up mattering most, and…
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| Jun 22 |
@jmduke Love this approach - one bummer is a lot of the docs platforms (cough @GitBookIO) don’t allow it
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| Jun 19 |
@gregpr07 @browser_use Long term it’s neither. OpenAI client a few api endpoints, abstractions here add almost no value
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| Jun 18 |
Since I made https://t.co/EgIFQGIGpH people think I’m anti-react and anti js ecosystem. I’m just pro simplicity and pro the platform. Loving what @ryanflorence and @mjackson are pushing out at the moment, Remix is the first “js” framework I’ve been excited for in a long time
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| Jun 16 |
If you have 6 years of experience, but someone 2 years out of a bootcamp is shipping at 4x your speed, at the same code quality & without working crazy hours - you can probably coast for a year or 2 but you're gonna have a hard time as people continue to get even more efficient.
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283 |
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| Jun 16 |
I wish there were some kind of universal way to measure software developer output for hiring - even if somewhat imperfect
Interviewing a lot recently and seeing candidates that look identical on paper but one of them can complete in one day, what takes the other 2 weeks.
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619 |
272 |
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| Jun 13 |
Has anyone figured out how to get a multi modal model to take an image of a UI and give back very specific down-to-the-pixel ways that it doesn't match spec, or ways to improve it (basically codifying have a design-eye)?
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| Jun 12 |
@athasdev Where does the name athas come from? It means “happy” in Irish
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72 |
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| Jun 12 |
Would love to know how many Twitter users have been “Guillermo’d”
When the legend slides in your DMs and makes you immediately take your shit more seriously
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158 |
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| Jun 09 |
@Shpigford pg_sync gem - works incredibly well even outside rails - might take some time but it’s one step and setup in like 2 minutes
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| Jun 09 |
@poiThePoi @Shreyassanthu77 Sorry I may have misread the tone/intent of your response. Not sure if you’re saying developers who work on software with low inherent complexity *should* be paid a quarter mil or not
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211 |
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| Jun 08 |
@JustDeezGuy I can assure you I prioritize "making code clean and elegant" - there are other ways to do this than hiring developers whose sole that is. My point is if that's the only thing a senior brings to the table, it's not enough.
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| Jun 08 |
@JustDeezGuy What kind of software are you involved in building?
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| Jun 08 |
"The workflows this unlocks are really going to change the way people develop software."
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| Jun 08 |
@Shreyassanthu77 Combo of
- Stripping back all unnecessary complexity
- Playbooks for everything
- AI code review with super specific instructions & knowledge of our patterns.
Means this can be instituted without having to have this kind of dev on the team full time
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| Jun 08 |
@hunvreus Sorry brain fart - I thought you were implying the library authoring step itself was no build, which was how I approached it with base styles - but this meant not using tailwind classes.
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| Jun 08 |
"In less than 15 minutes, I had a full app up and running with auth, database, email, styled and deployed!"
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| Jun 08 |
I'm finding our dev hiring now converging on 2 kinds of archetypes:
- Early Career - Strong written/verbal communication. Organized. Fast Learner. Knows the basics (html, css, js) - can learn their skill gaps.
- Senior - Gritty problem solver - great at figuring out really hard problems and getting their hands dirty.
Any senior who can't solve hard/unsexy problems and/or whose main focus is on "making the code super clean and elegant" just doesn't really fit anywhere.
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475 |
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| Jun 08 |
@hunvreus How are you handling the "no build" part with Tailwind? Are you manually converting all the properties?
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| Jun 04 |
Current 2.9% fees break down roughly as: ~1.0% operational costs (infrastructure, fraud, compliance) + ~1.9% economic rent for investors. That 1.9% "excess" is where the efficiency loss happens, based on payment elasticity research. 3/6
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236 |
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| Jun 04 |
The core trade-off: For every basis point (0.01%) Stripe charges above operational costs, the global economy loses ~$14-20B in transaction volume. Each marginal dollar to Stripe equity holders reduces global economic activity by $4,000-6,000. 2/6
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| Jun 04 |
There is an inverse relationship between the success of companies whose business model is transaction costs (e.g. @stripe), and the "GDP of the internet".
Stripe were the good guys in papering over a legacy system, but as new systems become possible, @stripe must choose between their actual stated goal - "Maximising the GDP of the internet", and Maximising Good 'Ol Shareholder Value - these incentives now are now fundamentally misaligned.
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| Jun 04 |
People still asking me "How do you not think LLMs are reasoning?"
CSS is one example - Jhey publishes a lot of really cool CSS examples - often based on new CSS features that are documented but where there's not a lot of examples. So - things that a human can figure out by reasoning. Even the top, most recent LLMs just, don't work for this.
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| Jun 03 |
This is a remarkably good piece of writing, and should become part of the canon for any startup that values taste
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| Jun 02 |
@bradleymeck @AdamRackis That's fair Bradley. Not supporting typescript is a tradeoff - although I don't think "think about all the ways a variable could be used" is an issue for a lot of teams. And the key disagreement I have is the assertion that you can build "software at scale" without a build step.
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| Jun 01 |
@AdamRackis If you think you need more context, perhaps refrain from the numerous insults you’re levelling. You are going to come out looking quite dumb at some point in the future.
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| Jun 01 |
@AdamRackis I am the employer. I got serious about simplifying things because I was sick of paying people like you ridiculous salaries to build incredibly basic software, and preserve the complexity that justifies their salaries.
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| Jun 01 |
@AdamRackis I’ve noticed a lot of your tweets try to make other people seem smaller so that you can feel bigger. “Most of us are busy doing *important* things”
Also, you seem to be back pedaling? “Only works for splash pages”, “no it works for production”, “ok, but hAve yOu gOt a real Job?”
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| Jun 01 |
The level of arrogance and ignorance in these posts drives me crazy.
It is 100% possible to build “software at scale” with simple solutions (including no build), *if* you put in the effort to figure it out. I’m confident in this take because I’ve spent a lot of time figuring those things out, all while being told by people like Adam that it’s not possible.
I’m pretty sure “Works for splash pages” is meant to bait people like me for engagement. I wish it didn’t work, but it does.
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| Jun 01 |
We started an experiment a year ago to build our React Native apps with a hybrid approach (stacked webviews that feel native), with some screens built in React Native where necessary.
With the exception of chat UI - which is still hard to do with a webview because of keyboard UX - the screens we've built in html have been 1) Much easier to test (pull to refresh), 2) Much easier to implement simple state and navigation, 3) Much less prone to break, 4) Oddly more performant and less likely to drop frames - and we use Lottie to make things feel native.
It's taken us a lot of iterations, but I genuinely think we've stumbled on something game changing with this approach - the big downside is the offline experience isn't great. But in almost every other area this approach wins.
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785 |
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| Jun 01 |
This person hasn’t seen preact standalone yet, have they
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| May 31 |
Most companies don’t want you doing important things with their API and circumventing their UI, for various competitive reasons
As agents become a thing, there will be more and more tension between these competing priorities, and my hunch is the consumer will probably lose.
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| May 31 |
He’s right. Remember the decades before typescript when there was nulls in products everywhere. Chaos!
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| May 31 |
We’ve done a lot more mobile dev in the last year and my biggest surprise has been that simply learning the core primitives doesn’t get you to “can build polished products out of the box” - I thought that’s what native dev had over the web, but it turns out it’s not true.
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491 |
272 |
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| May 30 |
@joshmanders What do you see as being the important differences between “react without rsc”, and preact standalone?
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115 |
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| May 30 |
This is interesting. But if there's only marginal difference, shouldn't you do the one that builds the most goodwill and exposes most people to the product?
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156 |
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| May 30 |
For anyone following the @remix_run announcement and wondering how to do no build (p)react
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90 |
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| May 28 |
What’s going on with Nikita? I know he doesn’t think these coins are the same thing as issuing shares. So why is he risking his reputation on this? Has he explained somewhere how this is different to all of the other similar crypto products that devolved into meme coins?
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| May 28 |
The key to building something *really* polished is the period after the "designs have been implemented" where the engineers, pms, designers do hundreds of use-tweak-test loops, see how it *feels*, and keep iterating til the end to end experience feels right.
You can tell by using their products that Google just doesn't do this - it's ticket driven development - if it can't be described and added as a ticket, then it won't be done.
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| May 27 |
For a long time there haven’t been great examples to point to for “What are some html first apps that feel as polished/slick as Js SPAs” but Ronan’s stuff definitely hits that bar. So nice
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188 |
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| May 27 |
If I were an investor looking to invest in one of AI coding tools (including Cursor, Windsurf, Devin etc), I would be putting my money on @codegen
They are building really novel and valuable stuff, and unlike the others are actually under hyped right now
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| May 26 |
The most pessimistic take on AI assisted software development is...
There's a fundamental ceiling on how well apps can be built if there is no feedback loop (the coder can see and interact with the results of the code).
A feedback loop requires reading and understanding the browser (and/or native apps).
This presents 2 problems
- The state of the art in browser interpretation even today, is still very low reliability.
- Most apps have an obfuscation layer (react/next etc) between what's in the codebase and what the browser renders, making this harder.
There is a real possibility that things improve, but don't reach to the point that even mid level developers can be removed.
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671 |
687 |
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| May 26 |
Hot take: if you play this at full speed, it’s actually a slower and less fun way to build web software
I actually do believe in voice to code, but this start/stop, slow iteration speed isn’t there yet
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| May 25 |
Next level poasting https://t.co/UXDAd81Cou
|
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43 |
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| May 24 |
Unpopular opinion: Cursor Agent mode is the least enjoyable way to use AI to code - the accept/reject UX is still super clunky, and it's quite slow most of the time
|
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164 |
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| May 24 |
@hirbod_dev @expo Hey! Sent you a quick dm on an expo video question, possibly in your hidden DMs
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97 |
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| May 23 |
Is there a good online slide tool like slidev but more controlled? I want to include code and have nice transitions, but I don't want to spend half my time debugging the slide tool
|
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180 |
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| May 21 |
Ok this is impressive from @cursor_ai using O3 Max.
We've been building a hybrid boilerplate (similar to hotwire native) and doing some weird atypical stuff.
Kept getting stuck on things that should be straightforward but weren't, and up to now Cursor was useless - none of the models seemed to *understand* what was happening.
Just tried with O3 Max (thanks @Shpigford) and it got me a working solution in one pass. Not only that, it managed to build an understanding from the code that the previous models couldn't.
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522 |
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| May 21 |
Shopify announced their official Web Components today. I thought inline event handlers were frowned upon but I'm loving the locality of behaviour and Platform First approach here
https://t.co/DriTf8HLGd https://t.co/uRiId39pqy
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| May 21 |
I think @staysaasy has the highest amount of tweets-I-wish-id-written of any account. Simple insights clearly articulated. This one is 100% my experience
|
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| May 20 |
@therealdecross Depends but if I'm 5 nested files deep then yeah, but that seems more dependent on short term memory which for me is quite bad. But reading text feels like it shouldn't have the same issue. https://t.co/iuibk3LLv3
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229 |
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| May 20 |
Am I the only one who finds it quite difficult to switch "brain modes" from coding or something else that's rapid-fire, to reading a long message or email and properly comprehending it? Is that a thing?
|
3 |
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304 |
202 |
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| May 19 |
As AI agents get more common, there will come a day when we choose products based on how annoying their captcha is https://t.co/pBFMUtFyF3
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| May 17 |
@joshmanders As much as this triggers me it is exceptionally well done and I commend whoever built it
|
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101 |
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| May 14 |
RT @tonyennis: The history of web development:
1. Frameworks and tooling (abstractions) are built to do what the platform can't.
2. The pl…
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5 |
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140 |
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| May 14 |
Holy shit it’s happening https://t.co/OEzgQiISzV
|
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462 |
48 |
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| May 11 |
RT @peteromallet: I spent the past months building https://t.co/LNfjaMBCem.
Growing from the Banodoco community, my hope is that it’ll bec…
|
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30 |
0 |
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135 |
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| May 11 |
@devhenryhale @coderhq Haven’t seen lake.js - what drove that decision?
|
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71 |
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| May 11 |
@devhenryhale @coderhq Adding to list to try over the weekend
|
1 |
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| May 10 |
Excited to announce I'll be speaking at Big Sky Dev Con in August 😊
Last year's speakers were some of the people I admire most in the industry, & I'm sure this year will be just as epic - still can't believe they let me in tbh, but I'll try not to disappoint
Come Join!
https://t.co/FJeFAmcVeX
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7 |
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298 |
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| May 09 |
@shreyashdamania @codegen It's in the screenshot :)
|
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| May 08 |
@coreyhainesco @shl Much of the original reasoning came from the fact that - for LLMs - typescript is more robust (if it compiles that usually means it works) has much more training data so can one-shot things quicker, has better UI libraries, and better DX (autocomplete etc). I showed him that with…
|
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301 |
. |
| May 07 |
I've gotten so tired of this that yesterday I built a custom UI for my bank data so that I can see it without logging in, and we'll likely migrate off @Xero soon because it takes on avg 1 minute to simply get to the home screen
|
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223 |
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| May 07 |
@kingsley_kelly The point was I wouldn't have intuitively guessed that *entering text into a plain text field* was the part that doesn't work reliably
|
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150 |
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| May 06 |
Wait what? @windsurf_ai is the html first ai ide? Must go back and use it more
|
1 |
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286 |
78 |
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| May 06 |
Is @OpenAI neutering the models available through the API? Asked o3 a really tricky code reasoning problem in the chat app - correctly identified and fixed everything. Used the exact same prompt in @cursor_ai with O3 and it totally missed it and kept going around in circles
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| May 04 |
@rauldoesnothing Have access. Was impressed with the onboarding (they have you set up a cloud VM which is the feedback-loop-closer), but then the first task I assigned the agent - it didn't check it's work in the browser and produced code that didn't work
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| May 02 |
@nickbakeddesign Pretty sure there was a 6713 in there at one point? (because I copied it)
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1 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
90 |
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| Apr 29 |
@adbc_an @codeiumdev @cursor_ai @cline Couldn't you say that about MCP?
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0 |
0 |
0 |
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71 |
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| Apr 29 |
This is exceptionally dumb. @codeiumdev @cursor_ai @cline will you guys figure this out? First mover gets to define the standard a la MCP https://t.co/yGgYbyw3Gj
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6 |
0 |
7 |
673 |
161 |
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| Apr 29 |
@nikitabier @believeapp (Big fan of your work, and @solana)
As an outsider, this mechanism (random's respond to a tweet without the founder's buy-in, with a $ symbol), no url, no website, looks like crypto/memecoin spam - might that not blunt the "will continue to spread virally until saturated"…
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2 |
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298 |
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| Apr 29 |
@shl @ofcboogeyman It was originally an internal plan though right? Assuming that changed, would love to hear about what changed your guys' mind - looking at the sheer size of the codebase, assuming it's just a priorities thing? https://t.co/DPicKn2zNG
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0 |
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0 |
0 |
252 |
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| Apr 29 |
@shl @ofcboogeyman @shl are you guys still planning on migrating the gumroad backend to Typescript from Rails?
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0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
110 |
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