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@0xashd

building @MorphoLabs // prev @delv_tech @viamirror @twitter

Sepolia Katılım Haziran 2021
493 Takip Edilen822 Takipçiler
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Dillon Mulroy
Dillon Mulroy@dillon_mulroy·
happy typescript go announcement day for those who celebrate
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cashd@0xashd·
@SeloSlav @normonics I like the analog, but there won’t be an orchestration class. Orchestration is code and the tooling will become accessible just like harnesses have evolved in our current state
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Martin Erlić
Martin Erlić@SeloSlav·
@normonics The Protestant Reformation is over. Work is no longer synonymous with suffering. Now come the NEET monasteries, the orchestration class, and cathedrals raised over centuries by people no longer in a hurry to justify their existence. I, for one, welcome the future
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Joe Norman
Joe Norman@normonics·
This is a really interesting and honest reflection from this fella What it reinforces in my own thinking is that we will still have something fir humans you can call "developer" for the foreseeable future However, it is going to select for a totally different personality type. This guy is classic software engineer archetype. That type is getting decimated. Another thing this reinforce in my thinking is that AI simply raises the bar as what constitutes a piece of software worth purchasing. AI today eats the kinds of software we are used to for breakfast. This doesn't imply there is no need for people, but rather that developers need to be delivering something next level. IF I just need another saas-style product... I can just have my AI one-shot it, and it will be even better because it will fit my use case precisely rather than approximately. For most people, reading "lines of code" sucks. for a very small minority, it was enjoyable. But to his point, that skill is rapidly becoming useless.
Mo Bitar@atmoio

I was a 10x engineer. Now I'm useless.

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cashd@0xashd·
@aubymori neovim with a common distro. I've started to use AstroNvim
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aubrey
aubrey@aubymori·
seriously is there a good lightweight code editor that actually looks good and isn't modernslop? so no electron shit and no zed
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Morpho 🦋
Morpho 🦋@Morpho·
Morpho Vaults V2 deposits: $1,000,000,000+ That's over one billion dollars in capital ready for borrowers once Morpho Fixed Rate Markets go live
Morpho 🦋 tweet media
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Henry Doe
Henry Doe@hcdoe·
earlier today my computer got compromised and every crypto wallet on it started draining. no approvals. no metamask popups. just funds leaving. this happened after i ran a github repo sent by a recruiter. sharing the story so others don’t fall for it 👇
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Elorm Daniel
Elorm Daniel@elormkdaniel·
In the early days of computing, especially around systems like IBM mainframes, there weren’t thousands of blog posts explaining errors. There wasn’t even Google. If you wanted to learn, you read physical manuals thick printed books that came with the machine or the language. Languages like FORTRAN or COBOL shipped with binders full of documentation. That was your “tutorial.” Most people learned in universities, research labs, or directly on the job. A senior programmer would literally sit beside you and teach you. It was mentorship and apprenticeship more than self-study. You didn’t watch a video rather you watched someone type. Debugging was even tougher. There were no friendly error messages. Sometimes you wrote code on paper or punch cards, submitted the job, waited hours for it to run, and if one tiny mistake existed, the whole thing failed and you started over. That pain forced people to understand the system deeply. You couldn’t copy-paste; you had to know what every line did. Communities still existed, just offline. People shared knowledge through textbooks, classroom notes, conferences, mailing lists, and user groups. You might wait weeks for answers instead of seconds. But because information was scarce, programmers read more, experimented more, and reverse-engineered a lot. Ironically, many early developers became extremely strong problem solvers because they had no shortcuts. Today we search errors. Back then, they reasoned them out.
Aryan@justbyte_

How did people learn coding back when there were no docs or YouTube tutorials??

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Matt Pocock
Matt Pocock@mattpocockuk·
The most important thing when you're working with coding agents: DO NOT DELEGATE YOUR THINKING Not only will this make for worse code, but the muscle you developed that makes you valuable in society, that you fought so hard to improve, will wither and die.
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Zed
Zed@zeddotdev·
Coming in tomorrow's stable release... 🧜‍♀️
Zed tweet media
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charles (csl) ᛋ
charles (csl) ᛋ@CharlieStLouis·
1/ Today the EF is sharing a bit more about how it's approaching DeFi going forward:
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Claude
Claude@claudeai·
Introducing Claude Opus 4.6. Our smartest model got an upgrade. Opus 4.6 plans more carefully, sustains agentic tasks for longer, operates reliably in massive codebases, and catches its own mistakes. It’s also our first Opus-class model with 1M token context in beta.
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Dipesh
Dipesh@dipeshdotdev·
@Jitesh_117 I use tiling window managers. I tried tmux, but I think I was forcing it when it wasn't needed. Tiling window managers are more than enough for very productive work.
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jitesh💙
jitesh💙@Jitesh_117·
man I love tmux
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cashd@0xashd·
@notparbez @jarredsumner Jared said the regression for Next workloads is most likely a bug. These other minor performance improvements will have large effects at scale given how widely used WebKit is. A few ms is huge still for these operations
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parbez
parbez@notparbez·
After seeing x.com/matteocollina/… post, im wondering all the perf improvement posts we see from bun about reducing few ms perf in methods, is it really improving anything significantly in production? bun started as fast but every new perf improvements are reducing few ms kinda improvements. Would love some real world big app wise improvements
Matteo Collina@matteocollina

Average latency under load (1,000 req/s): Deno: 11.81ms Watt: 13.65ms Node.js: 19.98ms Bun: 245.59ms P99 latency: Deno: 101ms Watt: 115ms Node.js: 174ms Bun: 974ms Nothing failed. Nothing crashed. But if you care about tail latency, the difference is hard to ignore. [attach chart]

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Jarred Sumner
Jarred Sumner@jarredsumner·
so many perf improvements to tweet about today
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shadcn
shadcn@shadcn·
A part of me wants to go back.
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Michigan TypeScript
Michigan TypeScript@MiTypeScript·
⚔️introducing TypeSlayer⚔️ A #typescript type performance benchmarking and analysis tool. A summation of everything learned from the benchmarking required to make the Doom project happen. It's got MCP support, Perfetto, Speedscope, Treemap, duplicate package detection, and more.
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Base UI
Base UI@base_ui·
Introducing Base UI v1 ✔︎ 35 unstyled UI components ✔︎ New npm package (base-ui/react) ✔︎ New website ✨ ✔︎ Configurable, composable, customizable ✔︎ Accessible, based on ARIA + WCAG base-ui.com
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vitalik.eth
vitalik.eth@VitalikButerin·
fusaka
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LUKE CHMIEL⚡️
LUKE CHMIEL⚡️@talkintokens·
TLDR: I am thrilled to share that I'm joining the Growth team at @Morpho to help build the native financial system of the internet, starting with onchain lending via Morpho Markets & onchain asset management via Morpho Vaults 2018-2019 was a real turning point for me. I graduated college, started working full-time on a bond trading desk, and got into crypto… Really, really into it. In those days crypto was fringe, and it stood for something. Somewhere at the intersection of hardcore libertarians, technocrats, and cypherpunks, the crypto people did not fit in. In a lot of ways we still don’t, but that’s ok It’s ok because the things we used to dream about are actually happening. Institutions are moving onchain because 1) we finally have some regulatory clarity and 2) because the economics make a whole lot of sense It’s probably good they’re here for the backend efficiency and not for the ethos. Somewhere along the way, we lost our spiritual purity. When greed blew us up in ’22; when copy-paste vaporware raised billions in ’23–’24; and again in the memecoin casino this year But despite it all, the dream never died. It’s been over a decade and Ethereum has never gone down. There is a programmable global financial system being built right now on the open rails of the internet. It runs 24/7 and it is beautiful The team @TheiaResearch refer to this simply as the Internet Financial System. For those have not read the IFS thesis (linked in the comments), it represents the unified, permissionless financial backend for the world. Today’s financial system runs on 90,000+ siloed, permissioned servers, each guarded by local oligopolies and gatekeepers. “Your assets” are just database rows controlled by someone else. The IFS replaces that with a single global settlement layer that uses smart contracts as its native language. This allows capital to flow freely across borders; it allows anyone to launch or access financial products; and it ensures that property rights and savings don’t depend on the local governor’s brother or a fragile banking regime And the best part is that nobody will need to know a thing about crypto in order to use it; it is just the backend, which is where the “DeFi mullet” term comes from This is the vision that first inspired me, and chasing it has essentially defined the trajectory of my career. It also happens to be the same shared vision of the team at Morpho, who have brought the DeFi mullet to life in a way that we have never seen before Morpho is what the credit layer of the internet is supposed to look like: -Open access to yield on any asset and across any risk profile or compliance requirements -Future-proof financial primitive built on immutable smart contracts -The most secure/audited codebase per line of code in the industry -Noncustodial lending with full transparency for users Seamless integration via Morpho SDKs & API Which is exactly why: -@coinbase powers its crypto-backed loans and earn products through Morpho -@SocieteGenerale uses Morpho to run the lending markets around its euro and dollar stablecoins -@coinbase , @Gemini , @cryptocom , @Ledger , @TrustWallet , @safe , @worldcoin , & more use Morpho to provide in-app yield to hundreds of millions of users -The @ethereumfndn and public DATs deploy meaningful size into Morpho to earn on-chain yield Institutions are leveraging Morpho as the backend to power their onchain financial products because it makes economic and logistical sense for them to do so, and we are about to see this trend accelerate at a rate that I believe will transform all of finance I am excited for this dream opportunity and grateful to everyone who has been apart of this journey so far. I promise you that we are just getting started
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