I understand the sentiment and I've been involved in software engineering in various roles for the last 25+ years. The thing that gives me hope is that never once in that time has the problem ever been that we didn't have more work to do.
It's not like all of a sudden I'm working 2-3 hours a day. I'm just getting a lot more done.
Last week OpenAI pushed out an AI agent orchestration framework called Swarm. I liked how lightweight it is compared to other open source LLM frameworks that I find overly complex. Unfortunately, OpenAI positioned it as an experimental framework and on their GitHub page said they wouldn’t be accepting any PRs for enhancements. It doesn’t sound like they’re going to maintain it. That’s too bad because it is a nice approach for developers looking for a simple solution to orchestrating AI agents.
So I forked it and I spent some time making it work with Anthropic and Groq LLMs. The result is Microagent.
I had a similar realization when I was at Google. Someone made the observation that if Google had a one-in-a-million error, that meant it was happening 50-60 times per second.
What happens when the last coin is mined and there's no incentive for people to run the network of computers that validates transactions? It seems like at that point the value would go to zero.
First off, thanks for doing something cool and releasing it as open source! Second, think the person 2 messages up has a valid point and I would like to offer the same constructive feedback.
As someone who is doing a lot of React/Tailwind development lately the more you can assemble larger pages from independently usable components the better. For example here: https://easyfrontend.com/components/ui/all/html?page=1
It would be useful sometimes to be able to search for a "card" component that I want to use rather than remember that I want to see cards I need to go to Blog #10. This seems to be my normal intent when I'm using a framework is that I'm trying to find a [card, dialog, select box, data table, etc].
Anyway though, don't let the feedback get you down, it's awesome and greatly appreciated that you're releasing nicely designed Tailwind UI components. Github repo starred and thread upvoted!
+1 to this sentiment. You'll also run into similar problems if you need to request quota increases. For companies that AWS takes seriously they'll approve the requests in a few minutes. For startups they'll literally take days reviewing the request before some random person at AWS decides whether to increase your limit or not.
Insurance companies are just legal scams. They take your premiums then come up with whatever excuses possible to avoid or delay paying out on legitimate claims.
And this is why I don't have a lot of faith in leaderboards to predict real world performance. Every time I see something like this I decide to give Bard another try and every time it disappoints. Ok Google, I'm ready to be hurt again.
It's not like all of a sudden I'm working 2-3 hours a day. I'm just getting a lot more done.