Launching https://leafy.you soon - a general-purpose in-browser assistant. Compiles reports, fills forms, interfaces with 900+ services you own.
More broadly, I spent ages developing a self-solving Kanban for mid-sized companies and enterprises (https://kodan.dev) - controllable autonomy level, multiplayer support, remote coding server, works on multirepo projects, mobile support, previews, and more. The pain exists, but it's pretty hard to break the integration barrier.
So I'm spinning the feature I used the most into a separate, easy-to-understand product for now.
I've got a taskboard that auto-completes easy tasks, specs out and visualises hard ones.
Draws from a bunch of sources, MCP-connects to my agents, comes with a browser plugin to invite meeting bots to calls, lets me (and my testers) leave notes on websites which also gets added in.
The goal is to make work as simple as dragging tickets around, and load as many best practices + review clarity into it
I've set a deadline to finally launch tomorrow, but frankly - I don't know how it's gonna go. Feeling proud, yet a bit anxious about it.
I want to automate the first half of software engineering work.
I'm building a system that reads Slack, listens to Google Meetings, user complaints, etc and gives me prompts I could feed into coding agents or planners.
Problem-to-prompt seems like a larger obstacle than coding these days, I wonder if it's solvable, and if solving it makes cheaper coding agents viable.
It has to be the auto-playing Tomb Raider agent, where LLMs were used to give Lara self-awareness. I've never seen anything like it.
It starts off with some classical computer vision shenanigans to understand the character movement, map layout, and to create the 'desire' to explore. Then the LLM is given input of images, sound descriptions and prior thoughts, lettting Lara remark on the situation, which feels very surreal and, at least for me - very unexpdcted. E.g. she hears the wolves howl and wonders how they survived in this environment. Or meta-remarks on game music changes.
Ligatures became one of my favourite features after trying out Fira Code. It felt like an obvious improvement that I was yearning for, for years.
I guess my brain likes having distinct continuous symbols to represent different operations - it reminds of of math in school & university. And I don't see a problem during editing, knowing they're made of multiple symbols.
And yes - I feel that I do struggle much more without them.
Completely out-of-the-blue, unproven guess - my mind is used to learning new symbols quick, from all the gaming I've done. And it's much easier to learn a new symbol that's cohesive, continuous & unique, rather than having to read disjoint characters and figure out a different meaning for them.
More broadly, I spent ages developing a self-solving Kanban for mid-sized companies and enterprises (https://kodan.dev) - controllable autonomy level, multiplayer support, remote coding server, works on multirepo projects, mobile support, previews, and more. The pain exists, but it's pretty hard to break the integration barrier.
So I'm spinning the feature I used the most into a separate, easy-to-understand product for now.