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chillacy

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chillacy
·last month·discuss
As I work with Claude more and gain a feel for its capabilities, I tend to run into 2 far less often, as I'll decompose my messages more for the current model limitations. The threshold also changes each release.
chillacy
·last month·discuss
I think a reading of Roman history shows the failure modes of a senate so often that I wonder if it was ever supposed to work more than a few hundred years.
chillacy
·last month·discuss
This looks more like "Human working at airline accidentally pasted their copilot prompt into whatsapp"
chillacy
·2 months ago·discuss
I switched from kimi to GLM for claws. I found it tends to be a stronger debugger when it comes to fixing openclaw issues with bash, being more thorough in finding the right root cause. Kimi tended to confidently misdiagnose. It's also much faster. The only downside is that it seems to cost an order of magnitude more than kimi.
chillacy
·3 months ago·discuss
A classic but I think relevant pg essay - https://paulgraham.com/makersschedule.html

The closest I attained to flow state vibe coding involved building UIs with claude 4.6 fast mode low thinking, a local TTS model (nvidia's), and hot reloading browser.

Arguably maybe I could have done better on higher thinking and then done more in parallel but it is more tiring.
chillacy
·3 months ago·discuss
If SWE Bench is public then Anthropic is at a minimum probably also looking at their SWE bench scores when making changes, I'd trust more a tracker which runs a private benchmark not known to Anthropic.
chillacy
·3 months ago·discuss
Yes, sometimes I have found it hard to sleep if I'm close to building something I want to build.

I think there is kind of a meme going around about multitaskers doing very well with vibe coding, and I can see it. Although, as someone who has the opposite problem, it can be tiring if I try to do more than two things at once.
chillacy
·4 months ago·discuss
I've found this to be true so far, junior engineers with AI can be super productive but they can also cause a lot of damage (more outages than ever) and AI amplifies the sometimes poorly designed code they can generate.

I suspect a lot of it best practices will be enforcing best practices via agents.md/claude.md to create a more constrained environment.
chillacy
·5 months ago·discuss
My take: openclaw should not run on a mac (even though looking at the skills it ships with it clearly was made to)

It should run on its own VPS with full root access, given api keys which have spending limits, given no way for strangers to talk to it. I treat it as a digital assistant, a separate entity, who may at some point decide to sell me out as any human stranger might, and then share personal info under that premise.
chillacy
·5 months ago·discuss
Check out https://x.com/jianxliao/status/2020667822800818253?s=46

Just uses claude. I haven't tried it much but it seems to be what you're describing.

Openclaw uses pi agent under the hood. Arguably most of the codebase could be replaced by systemd if you're running on a VPS for scheduling though, and then its a series of prompts on top of pi agent.
chillacy
·5 months ago·discuss
Pi's great. I really noticed it when trying some of the openclaw clones which try to be smaller in binary size and end up not using pi.
chillacy
·5 months ago·discuss
Boris has been very open about the 100% AI code writing rate and my own experience matches. If you have a typescript or common codebase, once you set your processes up correctly (you have tests / verification, you have a CLAUDE or AGENTS.md that you always add learnings to, you add skill files as you find repeatable tasks, you have automated code review), its not hard to achieve this.

Then the human touch points become coming up with what to build, reviewing the eng plans of the AI, and increasingly light code review of the underlying code, focusing on overall architectural decisions and only occasionally intervening to clean things up (again with AI)
chillacy
·5 months ago·discuss
> Singapore’s free speech restrictions, whatever you think of them, no longer seem so far outside the box. Trump is suing plenty of people. The UK is sending police to knock on people’s doors for social media posts, and so on. That too makes Singapore more of a “normal country"

That seems like it should make Singapore _more_ cool, at least my personal theory is that this changed a lot of perception of China (at least in some parts of gen z social media, "it's a very Chinese time").
chillacy
·5 months ago·discuss
Korea has a similar demographic shape, and Japan already passed its peak in 2005ish https://www.populationpyramid.net/japan/2024/
chillacy
·5 months ago·discuss
I heard it's because the labs fine tune their models for their own harness. Same reason why claude does better in claude code than cursor.
chillacy
·6 months ago·discuss
Hmm, I once transited in Heathrow in a return flight from europe to the US and had to go through Heathrow security for whatever reason, where they subjected me to liquids rules way stricter than either my source or destination did.

E.g. 1 day use contact lenses and prescription creams all having to fit in a tiny plastic bag. So I'm happy for this change.
chillacy
·6 years ago·discuss
Sort of reminds me of Braess's paradox: you add a new road and then overall traffic slows. More bandwidth? Larger videos. More roads? More cars. Faster processors? More abstractions.
chillacy
·6 years ago·discuss
Vertical integration? Even if their chips end up being a bit slower in the end, they'd probably increase their overall profit margins and get increased flexibility aligning their development cycles.
chillacy
·7 years ago·discuss
While L4 is terminal at Google, it's still not particularly high achieving for 6 years of career. Google also doesn't make it easy to jump from L4 to L5 either, so OP may feel like they're stuck in a rut because of that as well.
chillacy
·7 years ago·discuss
You could pipe a piece of your paycheck to the EFF, a lot of companies have donation matching.