Demetree
289 posts

Demetree
@codegreek
Spend a lot of my waking and sleeping hours figuring out how to code. And many other things.

I'm hitting some real meta-coolness in my agent-assisted coding journey lately, and I had to share it. Over the last few weeks, several parallel projects have started converging. Last week I shipped my first Microsoft Store app — a clean PDF viewer that brings some beloved Mac-like features to Windows. It’s called PDF Viewer and it’s completely free. (Not trying to dominate the store — it’s mainly a tool I wanted for myself + a test of the full Microsoft Store distribution process.) Now I’m deep into the next one: JumpDrive — an S3 cloud drive connector that feels like a modern, fast, native experience. It’s already submitted for review and should be live very soon. What’s especially fun? I’m building it using my own agentic development harness called Flow. I designed it exactly how I want to work, pulling in vibes from tools like Claude Code, Antigravity, Pi, and OpenCode. There’s something deeply satisfying about using the tooling you’re building to ship the next product. Agent-assisted development is getting really good. Excited to share more as this evolves.

I'm hitting some real meta-coolness in my agent-assisted coding journey lately, and I had to share it. Over the last few weeks, several parallel projects have started converging. Last week I shipped my first Microsoft Store app — a clean PDF viewer that brings some beloved Mac-like features to Windows. It’s called PDF Viewer and it’s completely free. (Not trying to dominate the store — it’s mainly a tool I wanted for myself + a test of the full Microsoft Store distribution process.) Now I’m deep into the next one: JumpDrive — an S3 cloud drive connector that feels like a modern, fast, native experience. It’s already submitted for review and should be live very soon. What’s especially fun? I’m building it using my own agentic development harness called Flow. I designed it exactly how I want to work, pulling in vibes from tools like Claude Code, Antigravity, Pi, and OpenCode. There’s something deeply satisfying about using the tooling you’re building to ship the next product. Agent-assisted development is getting really good. Excited to share more as this evolves.


I'm hitting some real meta-coolness in my agent-assisted coding journey lately, and I had to share it. Over the last few weeks, several parallel projects have started converging. Last week I shipped my first Microsoft Store app — a clean PDF viewer that brings some beloved Mac-like features to Windows. It’s called PDF Viewer and it’s completely free. (Not trying to dominate the store — it’s mainly a tool I wanted for myself + a test of the full Microsoft Store distribution process.) Now I’m deep into the next one: JumpDrive — an S3 cloud drive connector that feels like a modern, fast, native experience. It’s already submitted for review and should be live very soon. What’s especially fun? I’m building it using my own agentic development harness called Flow. I designed it exactly how I want to work, pulling in vibes from tools like Claude Code, Antigravity, Pi, and OpenCode. There’s something deeply satisfying about using the tooling you’re building to ship the next product. Agent-assisted development is getting really good. Excited to share more as this evolves.

I'm hitting some real meta-coolness in my agent-assisted coding journey lately, and I had to share it. Over the last few weeks, several parallel projects have started converging. Last week I shipped my first Microsoft Store app — a clean PDF viewer that brings some beloved Mac-like features to Windows. It’s called PDF Viewer and it’s completely free. (Not trying to dominate the store — it’s mainly a tool I wanted for myself + a test of the full Microsoft Store distribution process.) Now I’m deep into the next one: JumpDrive — an S3 cloud drive connector that feels like a modern, fast, native experience. It’s already submitted for review and should be live very soon. What’s especially fun? I’m building it using my own agentic development harness called Flow. I designed it exactly how I want to work, pulling in vibes from tools like Claude Code, Antigravity, Pi, and OpenCode. There’s something deeply satisfying about using the tooling you’re building to ship the next product. Agent-assisted development is getting really good. Excited to share more as this evolves.

I'm hitting some real meta-coolness in my agent-assisted coding journey lately, and I had to share it. Over the last few weeks, several parallel projects have started converging. Last week I shipped my first Microsoft Store app — a clean PDF viewer that brings some beloved Mac-like features to Windows. It’s called PDF Viewer and it’s completely free. (Not trying to dominate the store — it’s mainly a tool I wanted for myself + a test of the full Microsoft Store distribution process.) Now I’m deep into the next one: JumpDrive — an S3 cloud drive connector that feels like a modern, fast, native experience. It’s already submitted for review and should be live very soon. What’s especially fun? I’m building it using my own agentic development harness called Flow. I designed it exactly how I want to work, pulling in vibes from tools like Claude Code, Antigravity, Pi, and OpenCode. There’s something deeply satisfying about using the tooling you’re building to ship the next product. Agent-assisted development is getting really good. Excited to share more as this evolves.

I'm hitting some real meta-coolness in my agent-assisted coding journey lately, and I had to share it. Over the last few weeks, several parallel projects have started converging. Last week I shipped my first Microsoft Store app — a clean PDF viewer that brings some beloved Mac-like features to Windows. It’s called PDF Viewer and it’s completely free. (Not trying to dominate the store — it’s mainly a tool I wanted for myself + a test of the full Microsoft Store distribution process.) Now I’m deep into the next one: JumpDrive — an S3 cloud drive connector that feels like a modern, fast, native experience. It’s already submitted for review and should be live very soon. What’s especially fun? I’m building it using my own agentic development harness called Flow. I designed it exactly how I want to work, pulling in vibes from tools like Claude Code, Antigravity, Pi, and OpenCode. There’s something deeply satisfying about using the tooling you’re building to ship the next product. Agent-assisted development is getting really good. Excited to share more as this evolves.



I'm hitting some real meta-coolness in my agent-assisted coding journey lately, and I had to share it. Over the last few weeks, several parallel projects have started converging. Last week I shipped my first Microsoft Store app — a clean PDF viewer that brings some beloved Mac-like features to Windows. It’s called PDF Viewer and it’s completely free. (Not trying to dominate the store — it’s mainly a tool I wanted for myself + a test of the full Microsoft Store distribution process.) Now I’m deep into the next one: JumpDrive — an S3 cloud drive connector that feels like a modern, fast, native experience. It’s already submitted for review and should be live very soon. What’s especially fun? I’m building it using my own agentic development harness called Flow. I designed it exactly how I want to work, pulling in vibes from tools like Claude Code, Antigravity, Pi, and OpenCode. There’s something deeply satisfying about using the tooling you’re building to ship the next product. Agent-assisted development is getting really good. Excited to share more as this evolves.

I'm hitting some real meta-coolness in my agent-assisted coding journey lately, and I had to share it. Over the last few weeks, several parallel projects have started converging. Last week I shipped my first Microsoft Store app — a clean PDF viewer that brings some beloved Mac-like features to Windows. It’s called PDF Viewer and it’s completely free. (Not trying to dominate the store — it’s mainly a tool I wanted for myself + a test of the full Microsoft Store distribution process.) Now I’m deep into the next one: JumpDrive — an S3 cloud drive connector that feels like a modern, fast, native experience. It’s already submitted for review and should be live very soon. What’s especially fun? I’m building it using my own agentic development harness called Flow. I designed it exactly how I want to work, pulling in vibes from tools like Claude Code, Antigravity, Pi, and OpenCode. There’s something deeply satisfying about using the tooling you’re building to ship the next product. Agent-assisted development is getting really good. Excited to share more as this evolves.

I'm hitting some real meta-coolness in my agent-assisted coding journey lately, and I had to share it. Over the last few weeks, several parallel projects have started converging. Last week I shipped my first Microsoft Store app — a clean PDF viewer that brings some beloved Mac-like features to Windows. It’s called PDF Viewer and it’s completely free. (Not trying to dominate the store — it’s mainly a tool I wanted for myself + a test of the full Microsoft Store distribution process.) Now I’m deep into the next one: JumpDrive — an S3 cloud drive connector that feels like a modern, fast, native experience. It’s already submitted for review and should be live very soon. What’s especially fun? I’m building it using my own agentic development harness called Flow. I designed it exactly how I want to work, pulling in vibes from tools like Claude Code, Antigravity, Pi, and OpenCode. There’s something deeply satisfying about using the tooling you’re building to ship the next product. Agent-assisted development is getting really good. Excited to share more as this evolves.






















