Arkadiy Haidarzhy 🇺🇦

623 posts

Arkadiy Haidarzhy 🇺🇦

Arkadiy Haidarzhy 🇺🇦

@AHaidarzhy

web developer

Odesa, Ukraine Katılım Eylül 2018
95 Takip Edilen10 Takipçiler
Arkadiy Haidarzhy 🇺🇦
@RALee85 Russian mil bloggers are often complaining that frequencies are hard set on drone factories and cannot be changed after
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Rob Lee
Rob Lee@RALee85·
This is a potentially significant issue with the adoption of cheap UAS. Some UAS provided by Western companies to Ukraine only worked on a specific frequency, and the companies did not allow Ukrainians to change it or make other modifications. If that frequency was being effectively jammed on a certain part of the front line, then that UAS was essentially worthless. The innovation cycle is so fast that units need to be able to adapt the systems to the specific conditions of their operating environment.
Kyle@SonOfUhGunn

Did you know the military can't even fix a lot of the weapons and systems that it spends billions every year buying? It is called "right to repair" and it's fucking up our shit, to put it in technical terms. Watch more here: youtube.com/watch?v=VYslK8…

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Guido van Rossum
Guido van Rossum@gvanrossum·
I think I finally understand what an agent is. It's a prompt (or several), skills, and tools. Did I get this right?
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Ahrefs
Ahrefs@ahrefs·
NEW: Direct access to our API now starts from Lite! 🎉 Pull Ahrefs data directly into your vibe-coded tools and reports without the Enterprise plan. Higher plans get more API units per month, and can call more rows per request.
Ahrefs tweet media
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Arkadiy Haidarzhy 🇺🇦
@jeffrey_way Like @kelseyhightower once said that code is the form of self-expression and people want to express themselves in different ways, that's why we have many programming languages In a year agent will write perfect code from first attempt but I will want *another* perfect code
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Arkadiy Haidarzhy 🇺🇦
@jeffrey_way I December i was sure that I will not read code in March (now). Yet today I had to review and refactor vibe coded app and have no regrets of spending this time. Probably in a year situation will more or less the same because todays models are already very good
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Jeffrey Way
Jeffrey Way@jeffrey_way·
Folks don’t want to hear this, but my guess is, in a year, you won’t look at the code your agent writes at all. Doing so would be both beyond your ability and pointless.
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Arkadiy Haidarzhy 🇺🇦
Arkadiy Haidarzhy 🇺🇦@AHaidarzhy·
@nntaleb They are no selling ads so maybe loosing traffic to AI will not break their mission. Collaborative editing will still stay in Wikipedia, consumption will move to AI
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Nassim Nicholas Taleb
Nassim Nicholas Taleb@nntaleb·
Predictably, a victim of AI is Wikipedia. I picked mathematical subjects that may have an October seasonality, but are not affected by fashion/current events. Same for Math StackExchange. This, considering that a lot of the math learned by AI came from Wikipedia and MSE.
Nassim Nicholas Taleb tweet media
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dax
dax@thdxr·
@no_marz yeah it's probably in a config, we need to add a remove command
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No Marz
No Marz@no_marz·
Is there an easy way to remove an mcp from opencode? I installed 'pencil' and it installed an mcp server and I can see it in `opencode mcp list` and I see there's a `opencode mcp add` command but no commands to remove it! Do I need to delete it manually from config file? @thdxr
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dax
dax@thdxr·
@wesbos nvm just got one of these
dax tweet media
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Wes Bos
Wes Bos@wesbos·
… are the bots are gone??
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Arkadiy Haidarzhy 🇺🇦
Arkadiy Haidarzhy 🇺🇦@AHaidarzhy·
@jasonfried Building software for non devs will be as popular as: - automating personal tasks with Apple Shortcuts app - automating business processes with Zapier So maybe 1-2% will be interested in trying it
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Jason Fried
Jason Fried@jasonfried·
A bespoke software revolution? I don't buy it. It'll exist. It already exists. Small consultants and big consulting firms have made custom software for years. It almost always sucks. It’s bloated, confusing, and because the client pays, it’s built wrong in all the ways. Who’s excited about bespoke software? Software makers! Of course they're excited about building bespoke software — that's what they do. X is full of them. Your feed is full of people who love making software talking about making software. Of course they’re excited about the revolution. Echo, echo, echo... Most people don’t like computers. Nobody in tech wants to say that out loud. People tolerate computers. They use them because they have to. Given the choice, most would rather not think about them at all. So when someone suggests that AI means everyone will build their own custom tools, ask who "everyone" is. The three-person accounting firm drowning in client paperwork? They want the paperwork gone, not a new system to maintain. The regional logistics company with 40 trucks? They want the routes optimized, not Joe spouting off about this new system he’s been messing around with. The law firm billing 70-hour weeks? They want leverage on their time, not a software project to design. They don’t hate technology. But building and maintaining their own critical systems isn’t their wheelhouse, regardless of how much faster and easier it’s become. It's another job on top of the job. Will these people use AI? Absolutely, for all sorts of things. Will some outliers go deep and build real custom systems? Sure, but they're almost always people who already had some pull toward software. The curiosity was already there. They were dabblers before. Giving everyone access to software building tools doesn't mean everyone becomes a builder. A powerful excavator doesn't turn a homeowner into a contractor. Most people just want the hole dug by someone else. They don’t want the responsibility either.
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Christoffer Bjelke
Christoffer Bjelke@chribjel·
@thdxr @thsottiaux Could be an opt-in though. In the opencode.json or something. This way repo owners can know and decide if they want it
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Tibo
Tibo@thsottiaux·
Do people like this? We don't do this for codex because it exists to help you and it's important that you remain the owner and accountable for your work without AI taking credit. At the same time it does mean that you can't trace how popular codex is among repos.
Yuchen Jin@Yuchenj_UW

I noticed something interesting: Claude Code auto-adds itself as a co-author on every git commit. Codex doesn’t. That’s why you see Claude everywhere on GitHub, but not Codex. I wonder why OpenAI is not doing that. Feels like an obvious branding strategy OpenAI is skipping.

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dax
dax@thdxr·
messing with tighting up opencode ui and removing the horizontal padding better? worse?
dax tweet media
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Steve Schoger
Steve Schoger@steveschoger·
I put together a one hour video on how I've been using Claude Code as my primary design tool. Packed with tons of 🔥 design tips.
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Arkadiy Haidarzhy 🇺🇦
Arkadiy Haidarzhy 🇺🇦@AHaidarzhy·
@taylorotwell Very glad to see same conclusions we made intuitively in the team. For simple tasks Boost makes work slower and more expensive bc LLM training data is more than enough. Boost shines when preparing code for production, writing complex features, using new framework features, etc.
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Taylor Otwell
Taylor Otwell@taylorotwell·
Every wondered which model is best for Laravel and how much does Boost actually help? We had the same question - here's what we found out. 👀 laravel.com/blog/which-ai-…
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Josh Hamilton
Josh Hamilton@nearbycoder·
@void_exception @opencode I was thinking the problem would have been fixed with this bullet point - Self-evolution - do a task > check results > fix mistakes > try again
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OpenCode
OpenCode@opencode·
MiniMax M2.7 available in Go - Better at complex tasks over M2.5 - Fast - give it a plan and it runs with it - Self-evolution - do a task > check results > fix mistakes > try again
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Somber
Somber@SomberOne·
@christogrozev Bustamante, the interviewer, doesn't have the most functioning moral compass either, given that he's not exactly in favor of aiding Ukraine in their defense.
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Christo Grozev
Christo Grozev@christogrozev·
What a perfect case study of moral injury obliterating a moral compass.
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Max Rozen
Max Rozen@RozenMD·
AWS Lambda optimization games are always "fun" 2x your RAM, more than half your response time
Max Rozen tweet media
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Jason Beggs
Jason Beggs@jasonlbeggs·
All timestamps in Cloud now have a tooltip that displays the exact time something happened in UTC and your browser's time. Especially useful for the relative times.
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Jason Beggs
Jason Beggs@jasonlbeggs·
☁️ We've been cooking on the Laravel Cloud UI lately, but I haven't shared much so here are some updates: While at Laracon EU, we built a lightweight file explorer for buckets. View what's in your buckets, upload and delete files all without leaving Cloud.
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