Blake Seufert

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Blake Seufert

Blake Seufert

@BlakeSeufert

Systems Manager at McKinnon SC. Head of Design at Naavi. Education + Technology + Design.

Melbourne, Australia Katılım Ağustos 2011
592 Takip Edilen827 Takipçiler
Blake Seufert
Blake Seufert@BlakeSeufert·
@rsg @shl And require time to refactor constantly that could be building designs.
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Bobby Goodlatte
@shl Constraints are the point though If it’s too constraining, it’s probably time to refactor the design system
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Blake Seufert
Blake Seufert@BlakeSeufert·
@mcuban Are we prompting for answers, or using AI to build the tools that give us the answers? Scaling requires reliability that raw prompting can't provide. Use AI for the language layer and dedicated tools for the accuracy layer.
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Mark Cuban
Mark Cuban@mcuban·
So why did i bring this up? Not because i think something is wrong with AI. Nor that i think it should be used less. I still believe there are 2 types of companies.. Those that are great at AI, and those who will go out of business. I was thinking of it more from the perspective of a CEO. They are not going to know, understand or want to know the nuances of AI implementation. A CEO is going to want to know what they can expect from AI. What can it not do. How does it compare to our existing scenarios. And on the flipside, what can it do, with 100pct certainty or with greater positive impact than current systems. And what is the implementation risk It is going to take a long time before CEOs know how to determine risk vs reward with AI. But they are facing the "Innovator's AI Dilemma" today.
Mark Cuban@mcuban

I’m coming to the conclusion that the biggest challenge for Enterprise AI, and AI in general , as of now, is that it’s still impossible to make sure that everyone gets the same answer to the same question, every time. Which is a great response to the doomers. AI doesn’t know the consequences of its output. Judgement and the ability to challenge AI output is becoming increasingly necessary, and valuable. Which makes domain knowledge more valuable by the second. Am I wrong ?

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Blake Seufert
Blake Seufert@BlakeSeufert·
@mcuban Are we prompting for answers, or using AI to build the tools that give us the answers? Scaling requires reliability that raw prompting can't provide. Use AI for the language layer and AI built tools for the accuracy layer.
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Mark Cuban
Mark Cuban@mcuban·
I’m coming to the conclusion that the biggest challenge for Enterprise AI, and AI in general , as of now, is that it’s still impossible to make sure that everyone gets the same answer to the same question, every time. Which is a great response to the doomers. AI doesn’t know the consequences of its output. Judgement and the ability to challenge AI output is becoming increasingly necessary, and valuable. Which makes domain knowledge more valuable by the second. Am I wrong ?
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Blake Seufert
Blake Seufert@BlakeSeufert·
@chalaska SaaS product 10 years and counting 🙏. Melbourne locals.
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Chris Halaska
Chris Halaska@chalaska·
Genuinely curious, how many Aussie designers, founders and builders are here on X? Wanting to connect with you all!
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Drew Wilson
Drew Wilson@drewwilson·
I was employed as a construction worker for years.. but I’m not a “construction worker”. So many designers today are just passing through, but aren’t “designers”. If design is something you “used to do”, you aren’t a designer. Same for every profession. Design used to be a small group of folks, made up of people that for the most part, still design today. These are “designers”. They can’t outgrow it, can’t remove it from who they are. Just an observation that I feel our industry is a little weird with. Many folks want to still claim “designer” because being a designer is legitimately cool. But they aren’t a designer. They should know it’s totally ok not to be one, or to “used to be employed as one for a while”.
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Marko Ilic
Marko Ilic@markoilico·
If you're now designing or redesigning a website, this will help you a lot. I recently curated the best hero sections, footers, social proof and other website parts because I got tired of having 15+ tabs open (even with Mobbin). Giving it away 100% free. Comment on this post, and I'll send a Figma link to your inbox!
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Steve Lauda
Steve Lauda@stevelauda_·
Project showreel by Blissful / Avea Robotics // SOW Branding, app, pitch deck 3D environment made from scratch in Blender, video made in After Effects
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Ilya · イリア
Ilya · イリア@ilyamiskov·
Often times design is literally about how it feels. That's not easy to measure, but it can change everything
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Blake Seufert
Blake Seufert@BlakeSeufert·
@joshuatopolsky I mean they are engineered from humans. They make mistakes and fuck up. This isn't Skynet from the movies, emotionless calculation machines. LLMs are random, entropy generators which is great for iteration but not for reliability.
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Kevin Rose
Kevin Rose@kevinrose·
New startup idea, I'm calling it "TV". A TV with no OS, just a blank ass TV, BYO streaming device.
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Blake Seufert
Blake Seufert@BlakeSeufert·
@dhh @grok can you explain to me in simple terms what's going on here?
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Justin Witz 🏰🚀
Justin Witz 🏰🚀@justinwitz·
@Perpetualmaniac We need a business driven one like Omakub but with more attention and focus. That would make it easier for professionals and non-devs to switch
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Zach Vorhies / Google Whistleblower
With Politicians mandating client side scanning and bypassing encryption on Windows & Mac at the OS level... I want to give perhaps my most important privacy recommendation ever: Ditch Windows 11 (extremely bad). Ditch MacOS (about to get extremely bad). Use Omarchy as your OS. It's built on top of ArchLinux. @DHH, the creator, is a legend, now you get his super powers combined into one OS.
DHH@dhh

The Big Omarchy 2.0 Tour: If you're ready to try something totally different after using a Mac or Windows, this is your invitation to an adventure! omarchy.org

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Martin
Martin@martiinii_dev·
@dhh @mitchellh @FrameworkPuter I don’t mean to hate on Omarchy @dhh and I think it has a great potential, but from my current experience with it it lacks a few things. How would you change terminal or browser without unexpected issues? x.com/martiinii121/s…
Martin@martiinii_dev

My Omarchy experience: Recently I switched my small PC from Ubuntu to Arch and decided to give Hyprland a try. I’d seen how good it can look, but compared to something like KDE (which basically works out of the box), Hyprland requires a lot more configuration. Since I didn’t want to spend hours tweaking configs just to test it, I went with Omarchy - an opinionated Arch + Hyprland setup by @dhh First impressions of Hyprland? Sleek and minimal - exactly what I was looking for. It took me a bit to get used to the keybinds and tiling compositor but once I did, it felt great - especially if you mostly interact with your system through the keyboard Can’t say the same about Omarchy installation. The “bare” mode comes with a lot of stuff (1Password, obs, zoom ??). Meanwhile, swapping out essentials like browser or terminal isn’t straightforward. Sure, you can swap Alacritty terminal with another, but Omarchy comes with many scripts that rely on Alacritty or Chromium. Is Omarchy bad? No, not at all. I think it’s the best and easiest way to try Hyprland. It looks great, has solid keybinds, and puts a strong focus on security (full disk encryption) But here’s the catch: Arch is all about “do it yourself”. Normally, after installation you get bare system - no apps, no desktop, not even internet. You configure everything yourself and, and that’s where a lot of learning takes place. Omarchy skips that part by being “omakase” (chef’s choice) remix of Arch giving us fully a fully configured system with one command. That’s awesome for convenience, but it takes away the “Arch experience”. Omarchy feels like it’s stuck in the middle. It’s too opinionated for experienced Arch users, and too complex and fragile for beginners. - If you’re new to Linux, Omarchy gives you the shiny setup but hides the complexity under the rug. The moment you want to change something you hit walls because so much is hardcoded. - If you’re an experienced Arch user, Omarchy feels restrictive and time-consuming. Switching terminal shouldn’t break apps. - The preinstalled apps are a weird choice. Why bundle Zoom or OBS in a “bare” install? It feels bloated in places where Arch + Hyprland is supposed to be lean. So instead of being the best of both worlds, Omarchy ends up being a compromise: convenient at first, but annoying once you actually want to make it yours. Want to try Hyprland for the first time (new Arch users or experienced) - try Omarchy, it’s a great starting point. Want something that just works with no surprises or bloatware? KDE Plasma is your friend. Want to give Hyprland a proper try? Configure it yourself

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Mitchell Hashimoto
Mitchell Hashimoto@mitchellh·
Look what just came in the mail! Omarchy and Ghostty @FrameworkPuter desktop tiles! Totally unexpected and very cool. Thanks!
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Blake Seufert
Blake Seufert@BlakeSeufert·
@maxart @dhh This is cool. Any thoughts on setting up a template or something we could use to install our apps how we want them on new machines?
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maxart
maxart@maxart·
I love Omarchy, but wanted a way to quickly remove default apps/webapps I don't need to make it my own, so I created Omarchy Cleaner. Check it out: github.com/maxart/omarchy… #Omarchy #Linux (I hope you don't mind @dhh 😀)
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Digg
Digg@digg·
We asked users to let us know which communities should open up next and they have spoken: Happy to announce that Digg is now also for /books and /photography! Drop your fave books or photos you've taken in the comments and we'll share some invite codes in exchange 🤝
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Blake Seufert
Blake Seufert@BlakeSeufert·
My favourite part of #omarchy from @dhh is hyprlands super + right-click to resize windows. Holy wow, it feels so intuitive to me and I'm sitting here wondering why figma, excalidraw, hell Google drawings all don't use this concept !
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