Ryan R. Rosario
18K posts

Ryan R. Rosario
@DataJunkie
Software Engineer @ Google Part Time Lecturer @ UCLA ML/NLP, databases, data management systems, distributed systems, mountain biking. Opinions my own.
Mammoth Lakes, CA Katılım Aralık 2007
969 Takip Edilen19.5K Takipçiler

@AdCodes_ In terms of features, I prefer Antigravity but limits and stability are an issue. I like VSCode+Claude but it is missing some features that I use a lot in Antigravity.
English

Music (though there's still good stuff) and politics not being so nasty. I love technology but I miss people talking with each other & resolving issues in person rather then hiding behind social media. I say that as an introvert. And personally... frosted tips/puka/surfer vibe.
Dave@GamewithDave
People who actually experienced the 1990s: What is something you miss from that decade that just isn't the same today
English

@_6signxxx I flew in one early 90s from LA to Disney World. I remember how spacious the vertical space was. I am guessing the carry-on situation was a pain though. Not sure how the lights, gaspers and call button worked though.
English

Real question???
Why did we move away from having this much space to being packed like sardines??Is there a log!cal reason???
WELCOME TO BLACK TWlTTER @blacktwiterthrd
Delta Airlines Lockheed L1011 TriStar Cabin in the 1980's.
English


@OldManLefty1 There will be if the egos of these candidates pulling <10% don't drop out stat.
English

@techNmak Definitely. Honestly though, I don't know how I did this job before AI. I was slow as molasses. Understanding how to code though means fixing things that AI breaks, building systems and and spending more time optimizing for security and edge cases.
English

"Do not learn to code" is the worst career advice of the decade.
People are telling college students to skip Computer Science because AI will just automate it all. Andrew Ng just killed this myth at Stanford with a brilliant analogy.
When he tried to generate images with Midjourney, he typed: "make pretty pictures of robots" and got garbage.
His collaborator, however, understood Art History. He knew the exact vocabulary of lighting, genre, and palette. He spoke the "language of art," and generated masterpieces.
Andrew Ng is seeing the exact same thing happen in software engineering right now.
AI didn't replace the need to understand Computer Science. It made Computer Science the required vocabulary to control the AI.
If you don't understand how computers actually work, you are just typing "make a pretty app" into Cursor and shipping fragile, unscalable logic.
Here is Andrew Ng's exact hiring hierarchy today:
Level 1: 10 years of experience, but codes by hand (He won't hire them).
Level 2: Fresh college grad, but highly fluent in AI-assisted coding (He hires them over the 10-year veteran).
Level 3 (God Tier): Deeply understands CS fundamentals AND uses AI-assisted coding.
When humanity went from punch cards to keyboards, coding got easier, and more people coded. We are at that exact inflection point again.
AI doesn't replace fundamentals. It multiplies them.

English

This sounds kinda-sorta like a superset of Antigravity's browser agent. This will be good for senior citizens who may need help using their computer, and of course automation.
Claude@claudeai
You can now enable Claude to use your computer to complete tasks. It opens your apps, navigates your browser, fills in spreadsheets—anything you'd do sitting at your desk. Research preview in Claude Cowork and Claude Code, macOS only.
English

@_trish_xD PostgreSQL though sometimes SQLite is useful for very small toy projects.
English











