Avinash Joshi

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Avinash Joshi

Avinash Joshi

@avinashjoshi

Co-Founder & CTO @oncactusai | Building the 24/7 Call Center for Home Service Companies | Ruby on Rails | Ruby on Rails

San Francisco Katılım Haziran 2008
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Avinash Joshi
Avinash Joshi@avinashjoshi·
🚨 We’re hiring our next founding team member @oncactusai If you’ve been following our journey, you know why this matters to @itsajith747 and I.
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Garry Tan
Garry Tan@garrytan·
My CTO friend texted me: "Your gstack is crazy. This is like god mode. Your eng review discovered a subtle cross site scripting attack that I don't even think my team is aware of. I will make a bet that over 90% of new repos from today forward will use gstack."
Garry Tan@garrytan

gstack is available now at github.com/garrytan/gstack Open source, MIT license, let me know if it works for you. It's just one paste to install it on your local Claude Code, and it's a 2nd one to install it in your repo for your teammates.

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Garry Tan
Garry Tan@garrytan·
I've been having such an amazing time with Claude Code I wanted you to be able to have my *exact* skill setup: Introducing gstack, which you can install just by pasting a short piece of text into your Claude code
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nexxel
nexxel@nexxeln·
since everyone already knows, i’m joining @opencode here's a demo of a thing im working on: async subagents / background agents should this exist? tell me what you’d use it for
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DHH
DHH@dhh·
@MichaelDell This is such a compelling machine. Panther Lake is the real deal. Tandem OLED is so good. And physical esc + function keys together with haptic trackpad is 👌. Great job to the whole team!
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DHH
DHH@dhh·
Many thanks to @MichaelDell for having one of the new Panther Lake XPS 16 laptops sent over for Omarchy testing. There's a bit of work to do, but it's already very usable, and that tandem OLED is to die for 🤩
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Daniel Tenner
Daniel Tenner@swombat·
Love Omarchy? Stuck on an Apple Silicon Mac? Want to have a close experience anyway? Try this aerospace set up. Just point your Claude Code at it and go :-) danieltenner.com/omarchy-on-mac…
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Avinash Joshi
Avinash Joshi@avinashjoshi·
@ziwenxu_ I’ve been contemplating cloud/vps vs local. How’d you handle working remoting, especially with internet outage/reliability of home internet.
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Garry Tan
Garry Tan@garrytan·
I think people are sleeping a bit on how much Ruby on Rails + Claude Code is a *crazy unlock* - I mean Rails was designed for people who love syntactic sugar, and LLMs are sugar fiends.
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Avinash Joshi retweetledi
Yaroslav Shmarov
Yaroslav Shmarov@yarotheslav·
💩 nginx 🥲 localtunnel 🤩 Cloudflare tunnels ✅ free ✅ SSL ✅ no "warning page" ✅ your domain
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Peer Richelsen
Peer Richelsen@peer_rich·
our teams avoid the classic top down pm → design → engineering conveyor belt flow as much as possible our designers and engineers collaborate vertically on multiple projects if someone is blocked they can directly pull in help without waiting for a committee to present and wait for approvals
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Tomasz Onyszko
Tomasz Onyszko@tonyszko·
Most of “smart home” is making home dumber and complicated. Not to mention that it increase maintenance and makes it annoying for people at home. Not to mention that it ages quickly and is pain to replace. I’m not a Luddite same as @jasonfried but when I built my house I left most of the “smart” things behind. It is fine to use standard switch to turn on/off the light. It is fine that you need few steps to close the windows shades. We did it for years. It is fine. There are things that makes homes better but it isn’t a dishwasher that need an app.
Jason Fried@jasonfried

THE BIG REGRESSION My folks are in town visiting us for a couple months so we rented them a house nearby. It’s new construction. No one has lived in it yet. It’s amped up with state of the art systems. The ones with touchscreens of various sizes, IoT appliances, and interfaces that try too hard. And it’s terrible. What a regression. The lights are powered by Control4. And require a demo to understand how to use the switches, understand which ones control what, and to be sure not to hit THAT ONE because it’ll turn off all the lights in the house when you didn’t mean to. Worse. The TV is the latest Samsung which has a baffling UI just to watch CNN. My parents aren’t idiots, but definitely feel like they’re missing something obvious. They aren’t — TVs have simply gotten worse. You don’t turn them on anymore, you boot them up. The Miele dishwasher is hidden flush with the counters. That part is fine, but here’s what isn’t: It wouldn’t even operate the first time without connecting it to an app. This meant another call to the house manager to have them install an app they didn’t know they needed either. An app to clean some peanut butter off a plate? For serious? Worse. Thermostats... Nest would have been an upgrade, but these other propriety ones from some other company trying to be nest-like are baffling. Round touchscreens that take you into a dark labyrinth of options just to be sure it’s set at 68. Or is it 68 now? Or is that what we want it at, but it’s at 72? Wait... What? Which number is this? Worse. The alarm system is essentially a 10” iPad bolted to the wall that has the fucking weather forecast on it. And it’s bright! I’m sure there’s a way to turn that off, but then the screen would be so barren that it would be filled with the news instead. Why can’t the alarm panel just be an alarm panel? Worse. And the lag. Lag everywhere. Everything feels a beat or two behind. Everything. Lag is the giveaway that the system is working too hard for too little. Real-time must be the hardest problem. Now look... I’m no luddite. But this experience is close to conversion therapy. Tech can make things better, but I simply can’t see in these cases. I’ve heard the pitches too — you can set up scenes and one button can change EVERYTHING. Not buying it. It actually feels primitive, like we haven’t figured out how to make things easy yet. That some breakthrough will eventually come when you can simply knock a switch up or down and it’ll all makes sense. But that's at least 20 years down the road. It’s really the contrast that makes it alarming. We just got back from a vacation in Montana. Rented a house there. They did have a fancy TV — seems those can’t be avoided these days — but everything else was old school and clear. Physical up/down light switches in the right places. Appliances without the internet. Buttons with depth and physically-confirmed state change rather than surfaces that don’t obviously register your choice. More traditional round rotating Honeywell thermostats that are just clear and obvious. No tours, no instructions, no questions, no fearing you’re going to do something wrong, no wondering how something works. Useful and universally clear. That’s human, that’s modern.

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