Paul Dix

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Paul Dix

Paul Dix

@pauldix

CTO of @InfluxDB (YC W13), founder of NYC Machine Learning, series editor for Addison Wesley's Data & Analytics, author of Service Oriented Design with Ruby.

New York City, NY Katılım Şubat 2008
1.1K Takip Edilen9.4K Takipçiler
Armon Dadgar
Armon Dadgar@armon·
This Friday is my last day at @HashiCorp, after nearly 13 years, all starting with @mitchellh and a crazy dream. I'm thankful to all the amazing investors, employees, customers, partners, and community members who joined for the ride, it's been a blast! linkedin.com/feed/update/ur…
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Paul Dix
Paul Dix@pauldix·
Me to Claude
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Paul Dix
Paul Dix@pauldix·
@charliermarsh Congrats! You and the Astral team have had a huge impact in a short time. Excited to see how much bigger it gets
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Charlie Marsh
Charlie Marsh@charliermarsh·
We've entered into an agreement to join OpenAI as part of the Codex team. I'm incredibly proud of the work we've done so far, incredibly grateful to everyone that's supported us, and incredibly excited to keep building tools that make programming feel different.
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Andrew Lamb
Andrew Lamb@andrewlamb1111·
@pauldix @breckcs My problem is that then I lose track of the thread or have too many outstanding so eventually abandon many side quests
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Andrew Lamb
Andrew Lamb@andrewlamb1111·
100% agree the post from @breckcs sums up the current AI Zeitgeist > AI lets me try out so many more of my ideas, often in parallel. Inevitably, trying one of these ideas compounds into even more ideas. My mind racing with possibilities, it becomes hard to stop.
Paul Dix@pauldix

Good read from @breckcs on Adapting to AI and his work in 2025. I feel a lot of the same things. Although I'll say things shifted dramatically for me with Opus 4 and Claude Code in late May 2025 and have only accelerated from there. I've produced hundreds of thousands of lines of code in the last 6 months, but most of it has not gone to production and likely never will. Although there is some very big stuff getting released soon that includes the more well reviewed and iterated on bits of this mass of work. The challenge for me this year is to figure out how to actually harness all this new found power and capability without it collapsing the entire product. And how to rework product and engineering in this new world. I feel pressure to either adapt and thrive or fall hopelessly behind to other teams that make the best use of the tools and create processes that showcase what's possible. The possibility of the 100x or 1,000x team is already here, it's just not evenly distributed. His metaphor for being in a hot dog eating contest with unlimited hot dogs feels apt. The trick now is selecting which hot dogs to actually eat. blog.colinbreck.com/adapting-to-ai…

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Paul Dix
Paul Dix@pauldix·
Good read from @breckcs on Adapting to AI and his work in 2025. I feel a lot of the same things. Although I'll say things shifted dramatically for me with Opus 4 and Claude Code in late May 2025 and have only accelerated from there. I've produced hundreds of thousands of lines of code in the last 6 months, but most of it has not gone to production and likely never will. Although there is some very big stuff getting released soon that includes the more well reviewed and iterated on bits of this mass of work. The challenge for me this year is to figure out how to actually harness all this new found power and capability without it collapsing the entire product. And how to rework product and engineering in this new world. I feel pressure to either adapt and thrive or fall hopelessly behind to other teams that make the best use of the tools and create processes that showcase what's possible. The possibility of the 100x or 1,000x team is already here, it's just not evenly distributed. His metaphor for being in a hot dog eating contest with unlimited hot dogs feels apt. The trick now is selecting which hot dogs to actually eat. blog.colinbreck.com/adapting-to-ai…
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Paul Dix
Paul Dix@pauldix·
@brynary It's all bots here now. Bleep boop, 1 00 1.
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Bryan Helmkamp
Bryan Helmkamp@brynary·
It's been a long time since I've tweeted. (Is it still called that?) Excited to share a new thing soon!
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Paul Dix
Paul Dix@pauldix·
@lacker Yeah, I think the age of gobs of saved dashboards is coming to a close. Agentic UI that can produce what you want on the fly is more powerful. But saved shared views are also useful for a human to stare at occasionally
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Kevin Lacker
Kevin Lacker@lacker·
@pauldix Perhaps the dashboard itself will become unneeded if the InfluxDB-querying and “chart generation” skills for the agents are good enough
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Paul Dix
Paul Dix@pauldix·
This essay on bank tellers and why it was iPhones, not ATMs that brought the ultimate decline in human bank tellers highlights how AI could potentially disrupt jobs is a great read: davidoks.blog/p/why-the-atm-… This it captures it perfectly: “The ATM tried to do the teller’s job better, faster, cheaper; it tried to fit capital into a labor-shaped hole; but the iPhone made the teller’s job irrelevant. One automated tasks within an existing paradigm, and the other created a new paradigm in which those tasks simply didn’t need to exist at all. And it is paradigm replacement, not task automation, that actually displaces workers” A few months ago I stated that the productivity gains in software development would be limited by everything outside of actually writing code: x.com/pauldix/status… We’d run afoul of Amdahl’s Law where we’ve made creating code almost instantaneous but only gains modest improvements in our speed to deliver software. All the other tasks in the lifecycle would still take up too much time. I think that’s true, but the ATM/iPhone example highlights something more important for actually realizing the gains. Why optimize the speed of PR reviews when you can make them irrelevant? What does the SDLC look like when you rethink how it’s delivered and stop trying to automate individual human roles and tasks that currently exist? Something I’m thinking about in this magical time of AI where things that were previously impossible or unthinkable are daily routine.
Paul Dix@pauldix

x.com/i/article/2006…

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Paul Dix
Paul Dix@pauldix·
Reading comments on this HN thread started by a 60 year old programmer who is once again excited to create things due to tools like Claude Code and Codex. The responses are basically a bimodal distribution of either existential angst and despair, or this is the best time ever. I'm firmly in the latter camp, but also frequently wonder, where's it all going and what happens when we get there? At the very least, I'm excited to be building. news.ycombinator.com/item?id=472827…
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Paul Dix
Paul Dix@pauldix·
@kurt @chadfowler For sure, but I'm thinking more about bus factor. Or less macabre, someone leaving to pursue their dreams. There's at least some ramp time to get the next engineer on the case. Although significantly reduced now with the help of agents.
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Kurt Schrader
Kurt Schrader@kurt·
Amazon had two-pizza teams but we’re quickly moving into two-pizza-slice teams territory. I’ve explained this to probably 20 CEOs and engineering leaders in the last month and most of them aren’t even thinking about it yet.
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Paul Dix
Paul Dix@pauldix·
@kurt yeah, my thought is 2 people. Mostly because it's good to have at least one other person that has any idea what's going on.
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Kurt Schrader
Kurt Schrader@kurt·
@pauldix Occasionally 2 people. Or I suppose you could have 3 or 4 more toddlers by slicing them in half, but I haven’t tried that yet.
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Paul Dix
Paul Dix@pauldix·
Snowy Sunday here in Brooklyn. Might fuck around and try to write my own Claw.
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