br_aiengineer
203 posts

br_aiengineer
@br_aiengineer
Engineer, building things with AI 🦾


iOS developers: How long is App Review taking for everyone these days? It is now taking longer to get our app approved than it is to build the actual features.



Hello! Today we're releasing Paper Desktop Paper is now a canvas for Cursor, Claude Code, Codex. Any agent can read and write html to Paper. • push or pull from your codebase • pull real data from anywhere • less work, more design What will you ship? Sound on 🎶





I think we are witnessing the biggest explosion in software creation in history. New website creation is up 40% year on year. New iOS apps are up nearly 50%. GitHub code pushes in the US jumped 35% and in the UK around 30%. All of these metrics were flat for years before late 2024. The entire graph looks like a hockey stick. You no longer need a six month runway and a dev team to ship something real. We see this in our metrics as well! People who never wrote a line of code are building and launching apps. The barrier to building software just disappeared. What matters now is knowing what to build and the taste to build it right.








Bought a new Mac mini to properly tinker with claws over the weekend. The apple store person told me they are selling like hotcakes and everyone is confused :) I'm definitely a bit sus'd to run OpenClaw specifically - giving my private data/keys to 400K lines of vibe coded monster that is being actively attacked at scale is not very appealing at all. Already seeing reports of exposed instances, RCE vulnerabilities, supply chain poisoning, malicious or compromised skills in the registry, it feels like a complete wild west and a security nightmare. But I do love the concept and I think that just like LLM agents were a new layer on top of LLMs, Claws are now a new layer on top of LLM agents, taking the orchestration, scheduling, context, tool calls and a kind of persistence to a next level. Looking around, and given that the high level idea is clear, there are a lot of smaller Claws starting to pop out. For example, on a quick skim NanoClaw looks really interesting in that the core engine is ~4000 lines of code (fits into both my head and that of AI agents, so it feels manageable, auditable, flexible, etc.) and runs everything in containers by default. I also love their approach to configurability - it's not done via config files it's done via skills! For example, /add-telegram instructs your AI agent how to modify the actual code to integrate Telegram. I haven't come across this yet and it slightly blew my mind earlier today as a new, AI-enabled approach to preventing config mess and if-then-else monsters. Basically - the implied new meta is to write the most maximally forkable repo and then have skills that fork it into any desired more exotic configuration. Very cool. Anyway there are many others - e.g. nanobot, zeroclaw, ironclaw, picoclaw (lol @ prefixes). There are also cloud-hosted alternatives but tbh I don't love these because it feels much harder to tinker with. In particular, local setup allows easy connection to home automation gadgets on the local network. And I don't know, there is something aesthetically pleasing about there being a physical device 'possessed' by a little ghost of a personal digital house elf. Not 100% sure what my setup ends up looking like just yet but Claws are an awesome, exciting new layer of the AI stack.



Hi everyone ... I’m the developer of AgentTip, a macOS utility that brings AI assistants directly into your workflow. You trigger it from any text field and get inline replies without switching apps. Version 4.1 is coming soon and is currently waiting for Apple App Store approval. Version 4.0 is already available on the Mac App Store. What AgentTip does Instead of jumping to a browser or a separate chat app, you type a trigger directly in Mail, Slack, Notes, your IDE, or any other app with a text field. AgentTip sends the text to your selected assistant and writes the response back in place. What’s coming in v4.1 (pending Apple approval) OpenClaw support: integration with the OpenClaw gateway, allowing you to use OpenClaw assistants from any macOS text field. Key features in v4.0 (available now) Works with OpenAI, OLLAMA (local), and Apple models. Inline AI in any app with a text field (Mail, Safari, editors, terminals, and more). Custom trigger phrases (e.g., u/writer, u/idea, u/reply) to route tasks to different assistants. Privacy-focused approach: bring your own providers and keep control of your data and API keys. Pricing: One-time purchase $4.99 on the Mac App Store” Download: agenttip.xyz








