I happened to dip into Heretics recently and thought, if someone were to publish one of these essays as a blog post today, it would be decried as AI slop. This must be who the models learned to write from.
I recently did a similar thing to get all my private repos off GitHub while keeping the same git workflows and accessibility for other machines on my home network. Now my Pi is the remote for those repos.
I didn't realize initially Marc Newson was involved. Definitely echoes of the 021C. https://marc-newson.com/ford-021c-concept-car/
> Antigravity, as part of the Google AI Ultra plan, is my daily driver, my workhorse. There's your mistake right there. There is history. User beware.
Wondering what else I'm using from MS that might be at risk. <glances at TypeScript>
Can't help but think of this I re-read recently from Nietzche: > When I analyze the process that is expressed in the sentence, "I think," I find a whole series of daring assertions that would be difficult, perhaps…
I was thinking about this as a bull case for human developers. Seems if you're worried enough to do this you're not going to have LLMs write the new code.
Just tried out Opus 4.6 to make a ground-up new version of a perennial side project: static site podcast player. For this one I focused on loading speed and reducing interaction with repo. So it processes the images…
> I think many people have the skills they need, or can learn them, in order to work with AI agents - they are management 101 skills. I like his thinking but many professional managers are not good at management. So I'm…
Moped for the mind has a nice ring to it
I'm curious to understand more about your use case. I've been working on getting fellow designers out of Figma since it's easier to express intent in code now using LLMs.
He literally brings up a concern he calls the "lethal trifecta" when it's even remotely relevant.
Thanks for sharing! I tried a similar content-in-url approach for a family grocery list app but I couldn't get the url that short. (It worked but it was a bit cumbersome sharing over Whatsapp.) Will see what I can learn…
At least one person. https://tonsky.me/blog/centering/
I've been thinking about something like this from a UI perspective. I'm a UX designer working on a product with a fairly legacy codebase. We're vibe coding prototypes and moving towards making it easier for devs to…
For context, I'm a UX Designer at a low-code company. LLMs are great at cranking out prototypes using well-known React component libraries. But lesser known low-code syntax takes more work. We made an MCP server that…
Our low-code expression language is not well-represented in the pre-training data. So as a baseline we get lots of syntax errors and really bad-looking UIs. But we're getting much better results by setting up our design…
> I answered. I never answer the phone.
Not an engineer but I think this is where my mind was going after reading the post. Seems like what will be useful is continuously generated "decision documentation." So the system has access to what has come before in…
Mine is a much simpler use case but sharing in case it's useful. I wanted to be able to quickly generate and iterate on user flows during design collaboration. So I use some boilerplate HTML/CSS and have the LLM…
But not Sonnet?
My use case is a little different (mostly prototyping and building design ops tools) but +1 to this flow. At this point, I typically do an LLM-readme at the branch level to document both planning and progress. At the…
How does this differ from this project? https://github.com/simonw/llm
This way of putting it resonates with me: unlocking the value of fuzzy knowledge.
That's fair. It depends on the goal. I'm not trying to change careers. And I didn't get that sense from original poster. I'm mostly interested in prototyping or addressing niche productivity issues. But I feel I learn…
I happened to dip into Heretics recently and thought, if someone were to publish one of these essays as a blog post today, it would be decried as AI slop. This must be who the models learned to write from.
I recently did a similar thing to get all my private repos off GitHub while keeping the same git workflows and accessibility for other machines on my home network. Now my Pi is the remote for those repos.
I didn't realize initially Marc Newson was involved. Definitely echoes of the 021C. https://marc-newson.com/ford-021c-concept-car/
> Antigravity, as part of the Google AI Ultra plan, is my daily driver, my workhorse. There's your mistake right there. There is history. User beware.
Wondering what else I'm using from MS that might be at risk. <glances at TypeScript>
Can't help but think of this I re-read recently from Nietzche: > When I analyze the process that is expressed in the sentence, "I think," I find a whole series of daring assertions that would be difficult, perhaps…
I was thinking about this as a bull case for human developers. Seems if you're worried enough to do this you're not going to have LLMs write the new code.
Just tried out Opus 4.6 to make a ground-up new version of a perennial side project: static site podcast player. For this one I focused on loading speed and reducing interaction with repo. So it processes the images…
> I think many people have the skills they need, or can learn them, in order to work with AI agents - they are management 101 skills. I like his thinking but many professional managers are not good at management. So I'm…
Moped for the mind has a nice ring to it
I'm curious to understand more about your use case. I've been working on getting fellow designers out of Figma since it's easier to express intent in code now using LLMs.
He literally brings up a concern he calls the "lethal trifecta" when it's even remotely relevant.
Thanks for sharing! I tried a similar content-in-url approach for a family grocery list app but I couldn't get the url that short. (It worked but it was a bit cumbersome sharing over Whatsapp.) Will see what I can learn…
At least one person. https://tonsky.me/blog/centering/
I've been thinking about something like this from a UI perspective. I'm a UX designer working on a product with a fairly legacy codebase. We're vibe coding prototypes and moving towards making it easier for devs to…
For context, I'm a UX Designer at a low-code company. LLMs are great at cranking out prototypes using well-known React component libraries. But lesser known low-code syntax takes more work. We made an MCP server that…
Our low-code expression language is not well-represented in the pre-training data. So as a baseline we get lots of syntax errors and really bad-looking UIs. But we're getting much better results by setting up our design…
> I answered. I never answer the phone.
Not an engineer but I think this is where my mind was going after reading the post. Seems like what will be useful is continuously generated "decision documentation." So the system has access to what has come before in…
Mine is a much simpler use case but sharing in case it's useful. I wanted to be able to quickly generate and iterate on user flows during design collaboration. So I use some boilerplate HTML/CSS and have the LLM…
But not Sonnet?
My use case is a little different (mostly prototyping and building design ops tools) but +1 to this flow. At this point, I typically do an LLM-readme at the branch level to document both planning and progress. At the…
How does this differ from this project? https://github.com/simonw/llm
This way of putting it resonates with me: unlocking the value of fuzzy knowledge.
That's fair. It depends on the goal. I'm not trying to change careers. And I didn't get that sense from original poster. I'm mostly interested in prototyping or addressing niche productivity issues. But I feel I learn…