joca

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joca

joca

@devjoca

Backend engineer thinking about architectures for AI-driven systems. Building at https://t.co/kD77D9YADL

Lima, Peru शामिल हुए Temmuz 2018
1.5K फ़ॉलोइंग100 फ़ॉलोवर्स
joca
joca@devjoca·
@benln Hope Lima can be next in the list
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Ben Lang
Ben Lang@benln·
Cafe Cursor is coming up in these cities: • Florianópolis - 5/27 • Skopje - 5/28 • Tirana - 5/30 • Austin - 5/30 • Johannesburg - 6/5 • Tashkent - 6/6 • San Francisco - 6/10 • Manila - 6/16 • León - 6/17 • Dubai - 6/18 • Sofia - 6/26 • Cebu - 6/27
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joca
joca@devjoca·
@garrytan Do I need a frontier model for this? Or I can use something cheaper like deepseekv4 pro
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Garry Tan
Garry Tan@garrytan·
GBrain just got a big update: graph generation is now much more automated and powerful My knowledge wiki is now pushing 300k markdown files across multiple federated company brains
Garry Tan tweet media
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Cursor
Cursor@cursor_ai·
With the Cursor SDK, you can build your own agents with Composer 2.5. It's now available in Python and TypeScript. This long weekend, Composer usage is 90% off in the SDK. We're excited to see what you build!
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Pizarra Crema
Pizarra Crema@PizarraCrema·
Impresionante partido de Fértoli. Siendo mediapunta o extremo, no solo está jugando de doble 6 y ancla, sino que está destacando en ambos roles: hace todos los recorridos con orden, tapa huecos, intercepta, distribuye el balón con pausa. Cuánta inteligencia.
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Matt Pocock
Matt Pocock@mattpocockuk·
AI is making me obsessed with language Taking abstract business processes and naming them is INSANELY powerful for aligning AI with how you work I don't scan X for inspiration for course material/socials I capture notes (either as hooks and bricks) from the X channel This brevity makes communicating with AI so much faster, and helps you think more clearly
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Guillermo Rauch
Guillermo Rauch@rauchg·
𝚗𝚙𝚡 𝚍𝚎𝚎𝚙𝚜𝚎𝚌 We're introducing an open-source agent orchestrator for deep security reviews. We built it for internal use, and after running it against some major OSS projects, we gained conviction to share it with the world. Coding agents can now find critical vulnerabilities in minutes that would take teams of people months (if they can spot them at all). Since 𝚍𝚎𝚎𝚙𝚜𝚎𝚌 is optimized to work with Vercel Sandbox, you can effectively harness the power of thousands of agents scrutinizing your codebase in parallel. I encourage you to try this on your repositories. BTW: If you run an OSS project and want us to sponsor a run, my DMs are open.
Vercel Developers@vercel_dev

Introducing deepsec, an open source coding security harness. • CLI-first • Sandbox-based scaling • Pluggable coding agents • Designed for large-scale repos • Use AI Gateway or your own subscription After months of successful internal use, we put it to the test on some of the largest open source codebases. vercel.com/blog/introduci…

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Cline
Cline@cline·
We spent the last two months rewriting Cline from the ground up. The original Cline shipped right after Claude 3.5 Sonnet dropped. It was the first coding agent that actually worked, and we built it extension-first for the IDE. Great in its time, but the architecture got tightly coupled to IDE semantics, which made it painful to evolve the harness for the CLI and to extend into things like flexible agent profiles and agent teams.. So we took every hard lesson from the past year and started fresh. Built an SDK with better performance and token efficiency, with a plugin architecture for providers, models, LSPs, code search, themes, all of it. Then rebuilt the CLI and the extension on top. We're at the last mile and want folks in the beta with us. There will be breaking changes and missing features, and we'd like your help to close the gaps. We are offering $20 in credits to get started, plus a bounty program for contributors who help us fix bugs and make plugins. Join the #beta channel in our Discord and build with us! 👇
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Mauricio Reatto Duarte
Mauricio Reatto Duarte@mauriciord·
"/grill-me" skill really helps me understand the implementation of the new feature. It also allows me to further explore the design review with my teammates before creating the complete plan for that feature. @mattpocockuk
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Erik Sombroek
Erik Sombroek@ErikSombroek·
That moment when you boot into the main menu of your childhood.. Cross-compiled Warsmash (a LibGDX-based Warcraft III engine reimplementation in Java) to JavaScript using TeaVM so the whole game runs directly in the browser, with map files served from OPFS. Still some quirks left but great progress. Credits to Retera for his hard work. #Warcraft3 #RetroGaming #Gamedev #TeaVM #LibGDX #WebGL #Java #OpenSource #BrowserGaming #IndieDev #RTS
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Sarah Fong
Sarah Fong@MilksandMatcha·
Giving away 5 Windsurf Max ($200/month) plans Each person will get 3 months of free Windsurf Max (highest tier). Try out SWE 1.6, Cognition's latest, fastest, and most intelligent model, powered by @cerebras. Winners will be selected from comments in 48 hours, comment below why you want it.
Cognition@cognition

We’re releasing SWE-1.6, our best model in both intelligence & model UX. SWE-1.6 matches our Preview model on SWE-Bench Pro while dramatically improving on various behavioral axes. It’s available today in Windsurf in two modes: free tier (200 tok/s) and fast tier (950 tok/s).

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Shopify Engineering
Shopify Engineering@ShopifyEng·
Since we open-sourced pi-autoresearch, @Shopify teams have been running it on everything. Results so far: Unit tests: 300x faster React component mounting: 20% faster CI build time: 65% reduction Made pnpm run faster Autoresearch never stops trying things you'd never have time to try. Repo: github.com/davebcn87/pi-a…
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Sarah Fong
Sarah Fong@MilksandMatcha·
Giving away 5 Codex Pro plans Each person will get 3 months of free Codex Pro (highest tier). Winners will be selected from comments in 48 hours, comment below why you want it.
OpenAI@OpenAI

Today, we closed our latest funding round with $122 billion in committed capital at an $852B post-money valuation. The fastest way to expand AI’s benefits is to put useful intelligence in people’s hands early and let access compound globally. This funding gives us resources to lead at scale. openai.com/index/accelera…

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Not Elon Musk
Not Elon Musk@ElonMuskAOC·
You can no longer copy the links of video posts Go touch grass
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Jordan Hochenbaum
Jordan Hochenbaum@Jnatanh·
pi-autoresearch has been incredible for running experiments against our codebase, but I wanted a way to more selectively cherry-pick which ones become PRs, plus a few other bells and whistles. So I built pi-autoresearch-studio: granular experiment-to-PR selection with auto-resolved dependencies. My first @badlogicgames Pi extension.
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Andrej Karpathy
Andrej Karpathy@karpathy·
- Drafted a blog post - Used an LLM to meticulously improve the argument over 4 hours. - Wow, feeling great, it’s so convincing! - Fun idea let’s ask it to argue the opposite. - LLM demolishes the entire argument and convinces me that the opposite is in fact true. - lol The LLMs may elicit an opinion when asked but are extremely competent in arguing almost any direction. This is actually super useful as a tool for forming your own opinions, just make sure to ask different directions and be careful with the sycophancy.
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Shann³
Shann³@shannholmberg·
Karpathy's AutoResearch is changing how campaigns get optimized and most marketers haven´t heard of it yet. Ole Lehmann tested it on landing page copy, 56% → 92% pass rate overnight. here´s how it works for marketing / skills 🧵
Shann³ tweet media
Ole Lehmann@itsolelehmann

x.com/i/article/2033…

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Daniel Jeffries
Daniel Jeffries@Dan_Jeffries1·
I think I finally figured out why OpenClaw is amazing and took off like wild fire and why Peter is a genius, as Altman called him. And it's actually a different way of looking at it. It's not a DeepSeek moment for agents. It's a Napster moment. And just like Napster it will eventually force the industry to change. In essence when Napster came out the entire world told the music industry we don't want to buy CDs anymore and if you don't provide us a digital download experience we are just going to take it until you do. It forced the industry to create Apple Music and eventually Spotify. Both essentially killed most music piracy by making it ubiquitous and cheap and good. But it forced change. The same will now happen to software. Here's why: In essence OpenClaw lets you take what vendors don't want to give you: Unified access to countless applications. We all want a personal assistant that can talk to freaking everything and do anything for us in the digital world. But vendors don't want this. They want you locked into their bullshit. For example, none of the messaging platforms want bots on there. None. They all have explicit policies against them and make it hard to do this. WhatsApp doesn't want you on there. Signal. Telegram's bot father is garbage. It's all designed to keep bots out. They were designed for a pre-agentic era when bot = spam. Many other things are like this. The API layers are gated, hoop-jumping bullshit. Go get an enterprise account and wait for approval and yada yada. Want access to WhatsApp? Get a business account and attach a number (what small business has a real number anymore 😂) and messages can't come from a person, etc. Google ads? It's not just an auth, it's go get a special manager account and create an enterprise key and blah blah blah. It's a horrible experience because it was all designed for corporations to control access. Now people are saying, make your app easy to access and accessible to me and my machine avatars and do it in a headless way or you will be dead. Peter hacked around all this by making everything command line in the classic Linux style and using things like an open source library that reverse engineered the web version of WhatsApp. It's all a bit house-of-cards-y because he had no choice. At my company we had a similar idea early (and failed). Basically we wanted to make the best multimodal/computer using model because then it doesn't need an API or access hoops. You just go through the human interface layer and ain't nobody going to stop you. We failed because we weren't big enough and it's really a job for the mega-labs to solve because it is a hard problem and costs a shit ton of money. Peter was much smarter. Make it all command line because that is ready now. Use any reverse engineered library or project or proxy available come Hell or high water and make it work by any means necessary even if it is hacky. In short, he signaled to the software world that they better change and change fast or we are going to do this anyway and you can't stop us. Of course some are foolishly trying. Meta is banning Claws on WhatsApp, etc. They will all try to build their own gated, controlled, enshittified version of this thing. They will fail. And eventually everyone will offer a clear, easy way to get access via API for agents or they will be gone. In essence OpenClaw gave people what they wanted, which was an app connected to everything, even when most of the vendors don't want you to have this.
Daniel Jeffries tweet media
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