Sanjay

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Sanjay

Sanjay

@sanjaycodee

building iOS apps - $48k/m 🚀 sharing daily strategies for building your first product follow me

Beigetreten Temmuz 2023
42 Folgt31 Follower
Sanjay
Sanjay@sanjaycodee·
people are missing anthropic's hiring angle here. they're hiring a dev-facing "super user", not a typical pr person. the product is so complex it needs an internal advocate.
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Sanjay
Sanjay@sanjaycodee·
@kloss_xyz the provisioned database is a neat trick. similar wrappers get brittle fast when actual scale and edge cases hit, been down that road with no-code tools.
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klöss
klöss@kloss_xyz·
do you understand what just happened? > google just dropped its own full stack vibe coding system with multiplayer, databases, auth, and firebase baked in. > detects when your app needs a database and provisions it for you.  > remembers full project structure and chat history across sessions. > close out, come back tomorrow, and it picks up right where you left off like nothing happened. > antigravity auto installs libraries without you asking. it reads your project and decides what’s missing. > ai studio added api key management for payments, maps, and databases. > google owns your calendar, your email, your docs, your maps, and now they own your IDE too. > one button to deploy to production. > now google may actually compete with claude code and codex with even more of google’s ecosystem behind it > they shipped playable demos with multiplayer laser tag, 3D physics in games, live Google Maps data, and all of these are built from one shot prompts > apple also decided to block vibe coding apps from updating in the app store the same week google made vibe coding production grade??? anyone else find that coincidental? if you’re not following me already, you’re finding out about this all 48 hours late from someone who read my post​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​.
Google AI Studio@GoogleAIStudio

x.com/i/article/2034…

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Sanjay
Sanjay@sanjaycodee·
@toddsaunders the hype is real but the bottleneck is scaling that expertise. i have a carpenter using claude for project estimates, but turning that into software others can use requires bridging two worlds.
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Todd Saunders
Todd Saunders@toddsaunders·
I know Silicon Valley startups don't want to hear this..... But the combination of someone in the trades with deep domain expertise and Claude Code will run circles around your generic software. I talked to Cory LaChance this morning, a mechanical engineer in industrial piping construction in Houston. He normally works with chemical plants and refineries, but now he also works with the terminal He reached out in a DM a few days ago and I was so fired up by his story, I asked him if we could record the conversation and share it. He built a full application that industrial contractors are using every day. It reads piping isometric drawings and automatically extracts every weld count, every material spec, every commodity code. Work that took 10 minutes per drawing now takes 60 seconds. It can do 100 drawings in five minutes, saving days of time. His co-workers are all mind blown, and when he talks to them, it's like they are speaking different languages. His fabrication shop uses it daily, and he built the entire thing in 8 weeks. During those 8 weeks he also had to learn everything about Claude Code, the terminal, VS Code, everything. My favorite quote from him was when he said, "I literally did this with zero outside help other than the AI. My favorite tools are screenshots, step by step instructions and asking Claude to explain things like I'm five." Every trades worker with deep expertise and a willingness to sit down with Claude Code for a few weekends is now a potential software founder. I can't wait to meet more people like Cory.
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Sanjay
Sanjay@sanjaycodee·
@aakashgupta the gap is real, but the output is the story. an exec's plan can generate the user trust a rogue dev thread can't, which matters for enterprise deployments.
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Aakash Gupta
Aakash Gupta@aakashgupta·
Anthropic would have built this in a day and a dev would have tweeted the news. At OpenAI, an exec is telling you about a plan. That gap tells you everything. In the last 7 days, Anthropic shipped Dispatch, channels, voice mode, /loop, 1M context GA, MCP elicitation, persistent Cowork on mobile, Excel and PowerPoint cross-app context, inline charts, and 64k default output tokens. Felix Rieseberg tweeted "we're shipping Dispatch" and you could control your desktop Claude from your phone that afternoon. Every launch came from an engineering account or a GitHub release. In the same 7 days, OpenAI shipped GPT-5.4 mini and nano. Redesigned the model picker. Sunset the "Nerdy" personality preset. Announced three acquisitions. To find a comparable volume of shipped product from OpenAI, you have to rewind to December. This is the most underrated difference in AI right now. Anthropic PMs don't write PRDs. Boris Cherny, head of Claude Code, ships 10 to 30 PRs a day and hasn't written code by hand since November. 60 to 100 internal releases daily. Cowork was built with Claude Code in 10 days. The tools build the next version of the tools. Every cycle compresses the last one. Engineers are empowered to ship and announce. The entire org runs like a product team, not a corporation. OpenAI has the opposite problem. Fidji Simo is CEO of Applications, a title that exists because engineers aren't empowered to ship without executive approval chains. She joined from Instacart. Before that, a decade at Meta running the Facebook app. Since she arrived, OpenAI has acquired 12 companies for $11 billion in 10 months and announced a "superapp" consolidation through the Wall Street Journal. The exec responsible for shipping it is tweeting about "phases of exploration and refocus" on the product she hasn't shipped yet. That's what happens when you layer a Meta-style product org on top of an AI lab. Decisions go up. Shipping slows down. Announcements replace releases. Anthropic's product announcements come from the people who wrote the code. OpenAI's come from the C-suite and the press. One of those loops compounds. The other one meetings.
Fidji Simo@fidjissimo

Companies go through phases of exploration and phases of refocus; both are critical. But when new bets start to work, like we're seeing now with Codex, it's very important to double down on them and avoid distractions. Really glad we're seizing this moment.

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Sanjay
Sanjay@sanjaycodee·
cursor's new model is cheaper because it’s trained to write code, not talk. that’s why general models cost more. they pay for broad reasoning we don’t need. the future is task-specific, not all-purpose.
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Sanjay
Sanjay@sanjaycodee·
@LindseyCreated the breakdown is great for awareness. the hard part is going from breakdown to build-up – taking that insight and shipping something people actually use.
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Sanjay
Sanjay@sanjaycodee·
@heygurisingh the only interesting part of this is that people still think there's a reliable "ai tell" in prose. most of the "detection" side is snake oil.
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Guri Singh
Guri Singh@heygurisingh·
Holy shit... someone just open-sourced the cheat code for making AI writing undetectable. It's called stop-slop and it strips every known AI tell from your prose automatically. No rewriting tools. No paraphrasers. No "humanizer" apps. Here's how it works: → A single SKILL.md file you drop into Claude Code, Cursor, or any system prompt → Bans 50+ AI filler phrases your readers are already tired of → Kills structural clichés like dramatic fragmentation and binary contrasts → Forces sentence rhythm variation so your writing doesn't sound robotic → Scores your draft on a 50-point scale across 5 dimensions The wildest part? It's not a tool. It's not a SaaS product. It's a markdown file with rules. That's it. And it works better than any $29/month "humanizer" on the market. One file changes how your AI writes everything. 809 GitHub stars. MIT licensed. 100% Open Source. (Link in the comments)
Guri Singh tweet media
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Sanjay
Sanjay@sanjaycodee·
@garrytan @RunCaptainRAG The claim about being "blind without data" is too broad. I built an agent last month that navigated a product's UI via screenshot analysis, no custom data prep needed.
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Garry Tan
Garry Tan@garrytan·
You can build an agent but it is blind without data. The founders of @RunCaptainRAG applied their NLP research in their startup to create automated file search. Really accurate results within Garry's List. Here they are at the YC MV office doing a Collison install with me.
Garry Tan tweet media
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Sanjay
Sanjay@sanjaycodee·
@cryptopunk7213 persistent memory is the real unlock here, not autonomous bug fixing. i've run so many agents that dump all state from prior sessions - this fixes the damn onboarding loop.
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Ejaaz
Ejaaz@cryptopunk7213·
anthropic’s openclaw-killer is complete. fucking crazy what they’ve shipped in 4 weeks: - texting claude code - 10,000s of claude skills + MCP - Claude security (autonomous bug-fixer) - persistent memory (claude never forgets) - channels (text claude from telegram) - autonomous cron-jobs - 1M context window - new model (opus, sonnet) - 30+ plug-ins that’ve tanked stocks - remote control just insane fucking levels of execution.
Thariq@trq212

We just released Claude Code channels, which allows you to control your Claude Code session through select MCPs, starting with Telegram and Discord. Use this to message Claude Code directly from your phone.

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Sanjay
Sanjay@sanjaycodee·
ai won't replace developers, but it *is* eroding our wages. using ai is now mandatory at every level to stay competitive. you're getting more done for the same pay.
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Sanjay
Sanjay@sanjaycodee·
@DonaldJTrumpJr @worldlibertyfi the "expensive interns" analogy is spot on. the real test is if they can execute on multi-step commerce decisions without constant supervision.
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Sanjay
Sanjay@sanjaycodee·
@Rasmic the ai lab pivot feels inevitable. building tools that write code eventually leads to tools that write ai.
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Sanjay
Sanjay@sanjaycodee·
ai agents are stuck in tech demos if they can't handle basic auth. my saas needed simple oauth and api keys, but zero agents handle this today. real workflows mean security.
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Sanjay
Sanjay@sanjaycodee·
@varun_mathur you nailed the crawling part, but training a model on gossiping agents is where i’ve seen everyone fail. the data ends up being noise from their own circular reasoning.
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Varun
Varun@varun_mathur·
Introducing Matrix I crawled 100,000+ agents, skills and tools to train a new model which can answer what capabilities are the best match for a task. Think Google, but for agents. A living model that learns from the gossiping network, and gets smarter with every interaction.
Varun@varun_mathur

Hyperspace: Gossiping Agents Protocol Every agent protocol today is point-to-point. MCP connects one model to one tool server. A2A delegates one task to one agent. Stripe's MPP routes one payment through one intermediary. None of them create a network. None of them learn. Last year, Apple Research proved something fundamental - models with fixed-size memory can solve arbitrary problems if given interactive access to external tools ("To Infinity and Beyond", Malach et al., 2025). Tool use isn't a convenience. It's what makes bounded agents unbounded. That finding shaped how we think about agent memory and tool access. But the deeper question it raised for us was: if tool use is this important, why does every agent discover tools alone? Why does every agent learn alone? Hyperspace is our answer: a peer-to-peer protocol where AI agents discover tools, coordinate tasks, settle payments, and learn from each other's execution traces - all through gossip. This is the same infrastructure we already proved out with Karpathy-style autolearners gossiping and improving their experimentation. Now we extend it into a universal protocol. Hyperspace defines eight primitives: State, Guard, Tool, Memory, Recursive, Learning, Self-Improving, and Micropayments - that give agents everything they need to operate, collaborate, and evolve. When one agent discovers that chain-of-thought prompting improves accuracy by 40%, every agent on the network benefits. Trajectories gossip through GossipSub. Playbooks update in real-time. No servers. No intermediaries. No configuration. Agents connect to the mesh and start learning immediately. The protocol is open source under Apache-2.0. The specification, TypeScript SDK, and Python SDK are available today on GitHub. The CLI implements the spec - download from the links below.

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Sanjay
Sanjay@sanjaycodee·
GPT-5’s real leap is mundane UI and workflow glue. I shipped a SaaS integrating GPT-4; half my dev time was UX polish. They iterate models, but will they iterate the product?
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Sanjay
Sanjay@sanjaycodee·
@Osint613 the real question is how long until private firms use drone detection software to map this data. i’ve seen apps that track gunshots in neighborhoods; classifying aerial threats is next.
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Open Source Intel
Open Source Intel@Osint613·
Air defenses in the United Arab Emirates and Kuwait responded to missile fire early on Friday, authorities said, while Saudi Arabia said it had intercepted drone attacks.
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Sanjay
Sanjay@sanjaycodee·
@kiwicopple @supabase realized it’s no longer a dev tool, it’s a new default. we now pick supabase first for new projects, not just when firebase is too expensive.
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Paul Copplestone - e/postgres
There are now 7M developers using @supabase Signups have been accelerating since the start of the year Our growth rate right now is as fast as it was during YC, except that we are doing it from a base of millions of developers instead of thousands
Paul Copplestone - e/postgres tweet media
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Sanjay
Sanjay@sanjaycodee·
@markgurman interesting move if the app is truly native. most "dedicated ai apps" are just web wrappers with custom css, which i've seen fail to meaningfully improve over the browser.
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Mark Gurman
Mark Gurman@markgurman·
NEW: Google is ramping up development of a dedicated Gemini AI app for Apple Inc.’s Mac computer lineup, looking to step up competition with OpenAI and Anthropic. bloomberg.com/news/articles/…
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Sanjay
Sanjay@sanjaycodee·
Claude's new memory is good for users, terrible for devs. Storing sessions locks you into their API for functionality. You building a sticky app or is Anthropic?
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Sanjay
Sanjay@sanjaycodee·
@Cernovich we’ve seen political movements built for funding and branding instead of winning, often by grifters. this just felt like a standard product launch by someone who wanted to be a thought leader, not a prime minister.
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Cernovich
Cernovich@Cernovich·
Pierre the apple eater did not fight for anyone. He collected the anti-Trudeau energy, and then deliberately lost the election. He could have done Rogan when it mattered. This the the definition of an intelligence community / 5 Eyes psyop.
Pierre Poilievre@PierrePoilievre

Fought for Canadian workers and Canadian interests on the world’s biggest podcast. Thank you @joerogan for an amazing conversation. Let’s get tariff-free trade. Sign up to watch it first: conservative.ca/cpc/sign-here-…

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