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camwest

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Designing Loops That Prompt Coding Agents: The Six I Run

cameronwestland.com
2 points·by camwest·mese scorso·0 comments

Is this what driving an F1 car feels like?

cameronwestland.com
2 points·by camwest·2 mesi fa·0 comments

Treat Me Like an Investor

cameronwestland.com
1 points·by camwest·2 mesi fa·0 comments

MCP Subagents

cameronwestland.com
4 points·by camwest·4 mesi fa·2 comments

Mark to Market

cameronwestland.com
3 points·by camwest·4 mesi fa·0 comments

The Alignment Illusion

cameronwestland.com
4 points·by camwest·4 mesi fa·0 comments

Autoresearch Is Reward Function Design

cameronwestland.com
3 points·by camwest·4 mesi fa·0 comments

Cycle Time for Agentic Coding

cameronwestland.com
1 points·by camwest·5 mesi fa·0 comments

Everyone Codes Isn't About Coding

cameronwestland.com
1 points·by camwest·6 mesi fa·0 comments

Release Trains Aren't About Releases

cameronwestland.com
3 points·by camwest·7 mesi fa·1 comments

DHH Should Move Rails Off GitHub

cameronwestland.com
6 points·by camwest·7 mesi fa·5 comments

[untitled]

12 points·by camwest·7 mesi fa·0 comments

comments

camwest
·4 mesi fa·discuss
Yeah, I am very open to skills and REST APIs, but REST APIs have an issue where the token gets injected, and so it's not really a good auth story for everyone. I think that skills have a feedback problem: how do you refine your skill that you've shipped to your customers? The suggestion you are giving isn't great for something like the ChatGPT or Claude iOS app. Where would you even store the token in that case, for example?
camwest
·6 mesi fa·discuss
https://cameronwestland.com
camwest
·7 mesi fa·discuss
I wrote this piece to share my view about what cursor should do to manage some of the negative sentiment they’re getting online. What do you folks think?
camwest
·7 mesi fa·discuss
For me it's not about difficulty, it's about friction. BJ Fogg's behavioral model B=MAP says Behavior = Motivation × Ability × Prompt. When you increase ability (lower friction), you get more behavior for the same motivation.

AI lowers my writing friction. Same motivation, more output. I write more, I get feedback faster, I iterate more. That's the value for me.
camwest
·7 mesi fa·discuss
Prior version was flagged. https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46325286
camwest
·7 mesi fa·discuss
(No AI slop edition. See https://x.com/cjwestland/status/2002049554133229924?s=46 for context)
camwest
·10 mesi fa·discuss
Same, logged an issue: https://github.com/zed-industries/claude-code-acp/issues/18
camwest
·11 mesi fa·discuss
Agreed. I'm happy they're training on my data.

My reasoning: I use AI for development work (Claude Code), and better models = fewer wasted tokens = less compute = less environmental impact. This isn't a privacy issue for work context.

I regularly run concurrent AI tasks for planning, coding, testing - easily hundreds of requests per session. If training on that interaction data helps future models be more efficient and accurate, everyone wins.

The real problem isn't privacy invasion - it's AI velocity dumping cognitive tax on human reviewers. I'd rather have models that learned from real usage patterns and got better at being precise on the first try, instead of confidently verbose slop that wastes reviewer time.