polymorpheus

2.2K posts

polymorpheus banner
polymorpheus

polymorpheus

@polymorph3us

junior dev | happy to be here | LOTR | functions | types

The Shire Inscrit le Kasım 2025
204 Abonnements16 Abonnés
polymorpheus
polymorpheus@polymorph3us·
@siddontang Why stop at the tooling around databases? Why not go after the databases themselves? @AmplifyPartners writes, “When most databases were built, disk was incredibly slow and incredibly expensive.” We still use databases with those same decades-old assumptions.
English
0
0
0
82
siddontang
siddontang@siddontang·
The Astral playbook is clear: find a widely-used, slow ecosystem tool → rewrite in Rust → 100x performance → massive adoption. The same pattern is waiting to happen in database tooling. SQL linters, migration engines, query analyzers — all still running on Java/Python stacks from 2015. Who builds the Ruff for SQL?
English
16
14
342
21.1K
Chris Tate
Chris Tate@ctatedev·
Introducing a new experiment: 𝚎𝚖𝚞𝚕𝚊𝚝𝚎 Local API emulation for CI and no-network sandboxes → No mocks → Fully stateful → Full OAuth flows → Register apps and seed data → Production-fidelity API emulation → Emulates Vercel, GitHub, Google APIs
Chris Tate tweet media
English
18
15
313
13.3K
Sudo su
Sudo su@sudoingX·
this guy has 29 models on huggingface at page 2 ranking. no lab behind him. no sponsorship. $2,000 from his own pocket on GPU rentals. he compressed GLM-4.7 to run on a MacBook and quantized Nemotron Super the week it dropped. all public. all free. nvidia is a trillion dollar company with hundreds of teams but they are not the ones quantizing models middle of the night and pushing them out before sunrise. if nvidia stopped tomorrow their employees stop working. people like @0xSero would not. that is the difference between a paycheck and a mission. @NVIDIAAI you talk about making AI accessible. the people actually doing it are right here. 29 models deep burning their own compute with no ask except more hardware to keep going. you do not need to build another program. just look at who is already building for you. one GPU to this man would produce more public value than a hundred internal sprints. i am not asking for charity. i am asking you to invest in someone who already proved it.
Sudo su tweet media
0xSero@0xSero

Putting out a wish to the universe. I need more compute, if I can get more I will make sure every machine from a small phone to a bootstrapped RTX 3090 node can run frontier intelligence fast with minimal intelligence loss. I have hit page 2 of huggingface, released 3 model family compressions and got GLM-4.7 on a MacBook huggingface.co/0xsero My beast just isn’t enough and I already spent 2k usd on renting GPUs on top of credits provided by Prime intellect and Hotaisle. ——— If you believe in what I do help me get this to Nvidia, maybe they will bless me with the pewter to keep making local AI more accessible 🙏

English
136
896
9.6K
486.9K
polymorpheus retweeté
dax
dax@thdxr·
@thunkoid i haven't used claude models in a while so i don't have a reference point anymore but i've just been going about my normal work and haven't run into problems so far
English
1
1
54
5.1K
Kiko Beats
Kiko Beats@Kikobeats·
I'm glad to introduce `optimo` ✨ A simple CLI for optimizing media for the web optimo.microlink.io
Kiko Beats tweet media
English
17
41
682
39.2K
Aiden Bai
Aiden Bai@aidenybai·
what if ghostty had vertical tabs? i'm too lazy to learn tmux and i want an interactive UI to manage my agents/terminals
English
163
14
797
113.9K
polymorpheus
polymorpheus@polymorph3us·
@jamonholmgren as an engineer myself (and i can only speak for myself), my decade-long experience has been one that has mostly been shielded from the “customer” and “sales” and other depts. the culprit is by and large the mimetic adoption of corporate siloes 😬
English
1
0
1
203
Jamon
Jamon@jamonholmgren·
I think there’s a fair amount of this that will happen. Business is hard, especially if you’re new to it. Companies shield their employees from the messy and difficult reality of making money. Many great engineers don’t know what it takes to effectively lead teams and market products.
staysaasy@staysaasy

Re: SaaS death - I actually know of two separate SaaS companies that had employees leave in the last two years to build competitors and in both cases the competitive products are now dead, with zero traction. And the people that left those companies were very, very smart. And the products they built were the same shape as the companies they left, and they used AI to build them. But they had absolutely 0 success.

English
13
5
78
11.8K
Rhys
Rhys@RhysSullivan·
skills is still not sitting right with me as a concept i think it's because companies rushed to them as the next big thing as is what happens with all ai things now everyone is their docs as skills but it's recreating all the issues (authority, up to dateness) docs solved
English
72
7
264
29.1K
dex
dex@dexhorthy·
damn this is so good and encapsulates everything I've been seeing/saying in the last few months - a spec that is sufficiently detailed to generate code with a reliable degree of quality is roughly the same length and detail as the code itself - so don't review those things, just review the code at that point, if you care enough about that level of abstraction - unless you're vibing side projects or prototypes (yes, even zero-to-one software), you ABSOLUTELY SHOULD care about the code at that level of abstraction - you need to find SOME way to get more leverage over coding agents though, because just reading all that code is a pain, esp when a lot of it is slop - the default/dare-i-say-decel way is to go back to "i own the execution, and give little things to the agent, check it along the way" - the accel-but-safe-way is to find something - NOT A SPEC (the word "spec" is broken anyway) - NOT 3 INVOCATIONS OF AskUserQuestion - that lets you resteer the model *before* it slops out N-thousand LOC
gabby@GabriellaG439

New blog post: "A sufficiently detailed spec is code" I wrote this because I was tired of people claiming that the future of agentic coding is thoughtful specification work. As I show in the post, the reality devolves into slop pseudocode haskellforall.com/2026/03/a-suff…

English
31
30
531
250.9K
Perplexity
Perplexity@perplexity_ai·
Computer can now take full control of Comet to complete tasks. When you’re in Comet, Computer spins up a browser agent that can access any site or logged‑in app with your permission, without the need for connectors or MCPs. Available to all Computer users on Comet.
English
164
178
2.1K
339.3K
polymorpheus
polymorpheus@polymorph3us·
@hey_yogini Hot take: It’s because agents write too much and diagram too little
English
0
0
1
8
Yogini Bende
Yogini Bende@hey_yogini·
Vibe coding is creating overconfident engineers. (a rant) We used to debate architecture. Tradeoffs. Patterns. We had opinions about systems, if not, we used to study them. Now we read the AI output, it looks reasonable, we ship it. Without even thinking of other options. We are losing the habit of even asking the question. System thinking is a muscle. And muscles atrophy. There is a difference between an engineer who uses AI and an engineer who has outsourced their thinking to it. Most of us cannot tell which one we have become!
English
124
107
1.1K
53.7K
polymorpheus
polymorpheus@polymorph3us·
@GabriellaG439 Tangentially, starting with a spec is a form of non-Agile Waterfall. We were supposed to leave that behind ages ago, yet here we are nearly three decades later.
English
0
0
1
174
gabby
gabby@GabriellaG439·
New blog post: "A sufficiently detailed spec is code" I wrote this because I was tired of people claiming that the future of agentic coding is thoughtful specification work. As I show in the post, the reality devolves into slop pseudocode haskellforall.com/2026/03/a-suff…
English
117
267
2.5K
414.9K
polymorpheus
polymorpheus@polymorph3us·
@jamonholmgren @dillon_mulroy I’m surprised how much emphasis there’s been on prose (I guess they’re LLMs after all) and how little there’s been on visuals/diagrams.
English
0
0
0
5
polymorpheus
polymorpheus@polymorph3us·
@alexc_design @PixiJS I think so. That would embody layer 4 of the C4 stack. There’s more layers on top (below?) that
English
0
0
0
31
Alex
Alex@alexc_design·
@polymorph3us @PixiJS you mean like this? I'm still working on making the 'syntactic zoom' provide more information, but at the moment you can see dependencies between modules by collapsing the folders, and you can see call graph connections and references by clicking on the functions, classes etc.
English
1
0
0
31
polymorpheus retweeté
Alex
Alex@alexc_design·
Trying out @PixiJS for Code Canvas instead of using the DOM. The difference in performance is huge, and the added overhead for writing the rendering logic is not even noticeable now that I'm not actually writing any of the code myself anyway.
English
2
4
3
526
Sharp
Sharp@SharpCoder·
GPT-5.4 is not really good at @EffectTS_ , is there any official skill to help him out?
English
2
0
1
2.8K
polymorpheus
polymorpheus@polymorph3us·
@mgechev What instructions are fed into it as far as coming up with the grading rubric? That is, how are skills assessed? And who assesses the assessment guidelines?
English
1
0
0
297
Minko Gechev
Minko Gechev@mgechev·
Announcing skillgrade - the easiest way to evaluate your agent skills All you need is two commands: skillgrade init # create evals skillgrade # run them By default evals run in a safe sandboxed docker container github.com/mgechev/skillg…
English
18
47
352
43.4K
polymorpheus
polymorpheus@polymorph3us·
@emollick Have you written more about how AI should or could change org structure in longer form? Maybe Substack?
English
0
0
0
19
Ethan Mollick
Ethan Mollick@emollick·
I am not sure "Forward Deployed AI Engineers" are going to deliver on what a lot of companies are hoping for. They are useful, yes, but AI applications are far less of a technical issue, and much more about rethinking the deep expertise & structure of your organization around AI.
English
136
53
835
81.2K