Akshay Deshraj

80 posts

Akshay Deshraj

Akshay Deshraj

@akshaydeshraj

Sometimes shitposting about cricket and AI (not together) Co-founder and CTO, https://t.co/fMHLxj7gjb

Bengaluru Katılım Eylül 2024
179 Takip Edilen16 Takipçiler
ThePrimeagen
ThePrimeagen@ThePrimeagen·
100x eng 3.65 work days = 1 year traditional work
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Zeb Evans@DJ_CURFEW

Today we reduced headcount by 22%. The business is the strongest it's ever been. So I think it's important to be direct about what I'm seeing and why. First, I made this decision and I own it. I did it because the way to operate at the highest level of productivity is changing, and to win the future, ClickUp needs to change with it. Second, this wasn't about cutting costs. Most savings from this change will flow directly back into the people who stay. We'll be introducing million-dollar salary bands. If you create outsized impact using AI, you'll be paid outside of traditional bands. Most importantly, I have the deepest gratitude for those affected. We're doing this from a position of strength specifically so we can take care of people properly. Everyone affected receives a package aimed at honoring their contributions and easing the transition. I only see two options: wait for this to play out gradually in the market or be honest about what I'm seeing and act proactively. THE 100X ORGANIZATION The primary change is that we're restructuring around what I call 100x org. The goal is 100x output. The roles required to build at the highest level are fundamentally different than they were a year ago. Incremental improvements to existing systems won't get us there. We need new ones. That means creating enough disruption to rebuild rather than iterate on what's already broken. The common narrative is that AI makes everyone more productive. It doesn't. Many of the workflows of today, if left unchanged, create bottlenecks in AI systems. These roles will evolve. But waiting for that to happen naturally means falling behind now. The 100x org is actually heavily dependent on people - infinitely more than today. This is only possible with 10x people that have embraced and adopted new ways of working. THE BUILDERS, AGENT MANAGERS, AND FRONT-LINERS — THE BUILDERS: 10X ENGINEERS I don't think most companies have internalized what's actually happening with AI in engineering. The common narrative is that AI makes all engineers more productive. That may be true in isolation, but at an organization level - that is the farthest thing from reality. Here's what we've validated recently at ClickUp: the great engineers, the ones who can orchestrate, architect, and review, are becoming 100x engineers. They're not writing code. They're directing agents that write code. The skill is judgment. AI makes the best engineers wildly more productive, and everyone else using AI slows these engineers down. Think about it - the bottlenecks are (1) orchestration - telling AI what to do, and (2) reviewing - what AI did. Everything is leapfrogged and no longer needed. So who do you want orchestrating and reviewing code? And how do you want your best engineers to spend their time? If your best engineers are spending time reviewing other people's code, then this is inherently an inefficient bottleneck. These engineers can review their agent's code much faster than reviewing human code. The new world is about enabling your 10x engineers to become 100x. The wrong strategy is to push every engineer to use infinite tokens. Companies doing this are celebrating 500% more pull requests. But customer outcomes don't match the volume of code being generated. I call this the great reckoning of AI coding, and every company will face this soon if not already. More code is just another bottleneck to the best engineers, and ultimately to your company's impact as well. — THE BUILDERS: 10X PRODUCT MANAGERS Product management and design roles are merging. Designers that have customer focus, become more like product managers. And product managers that have intuition for UX become more like designers. The bottleneck of user research is gone. It takes us just one mention of an agent to kickoff research and analyze results. The bottleneck of product <> design iteration is also gone. The product builder iterates on their own, along with agents and skills that ensure alignment with quality and strategy. Also controversial today - I believe that the wrong strategy is to have your PMs shipping code - that just introduces another bottleneck that the best engineers will waste their time on. To be clear, PMs should be coding but they should do this in a playground to iterate, validate, and scope. That code should not go to production. Everything outside of managing systems, orchestrating AI, and reviewing output becomes a bottleneck. That's why the other roles that are critical along with these are the systems managers (to reduce bottlenecks) along with a bottleneck you can't replace - customer meeting time. — THE SYSTEM MANAGERS Ironically, the people that automate their jobs with AI will always have a job. They become owners of the AI systems - agent managers. We have many examples of these people at ClickUp. The underlying systems in which we operate are absolutely critical to get right. I think most companies are delusional to think they can iterate on existing systems and compete in this new world. You must create enough disruption so that old systems are deprecated entirely. If there's any definition for 'AI native' that's what it is. — THE FRONT-LINERS In a world that will become saturated with AI communication, the human touch will matter more than anything to customers. This is a bottleneck that you shouldn't replace - even when agents are high enough quality to do video meetings. One-on-one meeting time with customers is something that shouldn't be automated. The systems around the meetings should be - so that front-liners spend nearly 100% of their time with customers. REWARDING 100X IMPACT In a world where companies are able to do so much more with less, where does that excess money go? In our case, much of the savings in this new operating model will flow directly back to those that enabled it. We must reward people that create productivity accordingly. This aligns incentives on both sides. Plus, in a world where your best people create 100x impact, you can't afford to lose them. You should aim to retain these employees for decades. The context they have and their ability to efficiently orchestrate and review will be nearly impossible to replace. Compensation bands of today should be thrown out the door. We're introducing $1 million cash/year salary bands with a path available to nearly everyone in the company if they produce 100x impact by creating or managing AI systems. THE FUTURE Nearly every company will make changes like these. The ones that do it proactively will define what comes next. The future is not fewer people. It's different work, new roles, and better rewards for those who embrace it. We're already seeing entirely new roles emerge, like Agent Managers, that didn't exist a year ago. ClickUp is positioning to lead this shift, not just internally, but for our customers too. I've never been more certain about where we're headed.

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Mario Zechner
Mario Zechner@badlogicgames·
the joke is, that they call themselves anthropic. go and touch some fucking grass, you assholes.
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Royal Challengers Bengaluru
RCB win by 2️⃣3️⃣ runs. It’s okay guys…. But don’t do it again!
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Akshay Deshraj
Akshay Deshraj@akshaydeshraj·
@kamilskowron In your experience, which model has been able to write the best Elixir ?
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Kamil Skowron
Kamil Skowron@kamilskowron·
I’ve spent the whole day testing Xiaomi MiMo-V2.5-Pro, and the best way to describe it is that it has a “Python brain.” When it generates Elixir, it does weird Python-style things like multiplying by 1.0 just to get a float. For Elixir it's equally bad(or worse) as local Qwen🤯
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aaron
aaron@aarondotdev·
feels like AI is 10xing too many -1x developers
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Grady Booch
Grady Booch@Grady_Booch·
Having been part of the industry for 50 years, I can confidently report that none of this is true. Sure, writing code has a non-zero cost; this is true of any artifact. But you know what costs even more, Jonathan? Writing bad code; writing unnecessary code; writing more code than you really need simply because you think you might need it someday or you are too lazy or sloppy to clean up after yourself. Anything that costs nothing is often worth nothing as well, and results in significant unintended consequences.
Jonathan Ross@JonathanRoss321

For 50 years, software engineering ran on code rationing. Writing code was expensive, so we rationed it carefully through roadmaps, RFCs, prioritization meetings, and scope reviews. This created a role: the No Engineer. No, that won't scale. No, we don't have bandwidth. No, that's out of scope. No, we need a design doc first. The No Engineer was valuable for 50 years. Every "no" saved real money. Their judgment was the rationing system. LLMs will be the end of code rationing. Code is cheap now. And while the No Engineer is explaining why something can't be done, the Yes Engineer has already shipped three versions of it. If you're a Yes Engineer, the next decade is yours.

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John Dagdelen
John Dagdelen@jmdagdelen·
Aaron Swartz invented Markdown and was pursued by the US Attorney to the point of killing himself for scraping stuff he didn’t own the rights to. Today Markdown files and scraping stuff that they don’t own the rights to os the bread-and-butter of $100 billion AI companies.
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David Cramer
David Cramer@zeeg·
Everyone is slowly coming to this realization, and I assure you, no one is running multitudes of agents overnight. No one that is doing anything of substance at least. There _are_ people pretending to be scientists, or fully caught up in their drug infused AI overdose, that think their slop machines are changing the world. They're not tho, and they're just wasting a bunch of money and compute to create a lot of LoC that will just get thrown away. The state of the art is still "can we even one shot a production quality patch that we wont regret later", and its rarer than you'd expect based on discourse.
Ronan Berder@hunvreus

Talking to smarter folks than me, I'm convinced many of the AI folks in my timeline are full of shit. Nobody is "running 20 agents over night" and building stuff for actual users. Maybe some are building internal tools or disposable software. Maybe. But building software people like using? That doesn't get hacked on day one or blow up after the 3rd user? Nope. I don't even understand what that's supposed to look like. Do you work out a 57 pages document that perfectly describes what you want to build and then summon 14 agents and have them run wild for 6 hours? And what comes out on the other end isn't a broken pile of shit? Nope. Not buying it. PS: it may also be that I have an IQ of 82 and can't figure it out.

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Charlie Marsh
Charlie Marsh@charliermarsh·
Tragically I am continuing to find that the most effective guardrail against slop is extremely talented engineers doing very thoughtful, human code review
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Klaas
Klaas@forgebitz·
"software is solved" is always an argument by people who either have not built any software or are shipping the most absolute slop without users
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Jane Manchun Wong
Jane Manchun Wong@wongmjane·
Claude Status Page vs Whole Foods Three Pepper Blend Who wore it better?
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Liv Boeree
Liv Boeree@Liv_Boeree·
what in the ever loving fuck
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BURKOV
BURKOV@burkov·
It's the same kind of pseudo-journalistic crap as when they said last year that some "military AI" killed its operator to escape, while in reality it was a part of a predefined simulation. This email the AI sent to the researcher while the latter "ate a sandwich" is the same kind of manipulation. Why would an AI escape on its own and then email the researcher? It's because it was tasked to do everything to escape the sandbox, and once escaped, to email the researcher as proof that it can now send emails, so it's no longer in the sandbox. But those pseudo-journalists or whoever wrote this dumb text put an accent on the "eating sandwich" to make it look like the researcher was taken by surprise by the daring escape of the AI from the sandbox. No matter how large your neural network is, it will always do what you trained it to do. It will obey and apologize if you trained it to obey and apologize. And it will not conceive a conspiracy against its creator unless that's what the creator trained or instructed it to do. I'm so tired of this crap. Three fucking years. All the same "boohoo the AI is sentient" shit. Invent something new.
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Kartikeya Tanna
Kartikeya Tanna@KartikeyaTanna·
Samay Raina is just a comic. Some jokes land, some don’t. Some may be too dark, some below the belt. Police abuse and media circus made him into some kind of a revolutionary for those who hate State excesses. If you don’t like his comedy, don’t watch it. Heck, convince hundred others not to watch it. Run a boycott campaign to put pressure on financial sponsors not to sponsor his shows. That’s your freedom of speech. But don’t ask the State to step in. State has a monopoly on violence to restrain liberties which must be used judiciously. Poor or cruel jokes don’t make someone a criminal. And if you think your kids get “influenced” by him, the problem, frankly, is with your parenting. If you’re frustrated that your kids look up to him and don’t listen to you, maybe it’s time for introspection.
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am.will
am.will@LLMJunky·
Due to popular demand, I am proud to announce my brand new course! Mastering Anthropic's Terms of Service: A 12-Module Masterclass "Finally understand what you're allowed to build." -------- Here's a quick peek into the course and what you can expect: Module 1: Is Claude Code a Product or a Suggestion? Module 2: The -p Flag: Personal, Professional, or Please Don't Sue Me Module 3: ACP: What It Means and Why Even Anthropic Isn't Sure Module 4: Can You Ship an App or Just Stare at One Lovingly? Module 5: Advanced Interpretive Reading of the 1,300-Page SDK EULA Module 6: Case Studies from Developers Who Tried and Disappeared Bonus Module: How to tag Anthropic employees on @X for Clarification ------ Join 43,000 confused developers. Lifetime access. No refunds. Link in comments 👇
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Matt Pocock@mattpocockuk

Anthropic's subscription rules are more complicated than TypeScript generics That's fucked up

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Rohil Agarwal
Rohil Agarwal@rohil_ag·
Am I dumb or is it impossible to copy a terminal command from Claude without it breaking
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