EB
25K posts


I'm giving away five $200 Max plans for @DevinAI
If you're using tools like Claude Code, Codex, or Cursor and haven't tried @DevinAI, comment below with what you're building to be eligible. ⚡️
ellis@DriscollEllis
all you nerds hyperventilating about your claude code config would be gobsmacked by the sophistication devin has had for months. cc is catching up but still relatively unserious
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@vigobronx Bu dilleri anlama skill’lerini kaybetmedikçe sorun yok artık. Yakında ona da gerek kalmayacak, insana görünür bir programlama dili kalmadığında.
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@KaiXCreator No, never. I don’t allow agents to access the application server where the .env file resides.
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@hayatboule Alttaki site bunun için var. Anonim kalmak istiyorsanız, herhangi bir sosyal medya bağlantısını paylaşmadan önce aşağıdaki siteye yapıştırıp kişisel iz olmayan, güvenle paylaşılabilecek linki basitçe alabilirsiniz.
cleanbeforeshare.com
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@theo You can share your plan, review or any HTML output easily via htmlship.com (npx, Python, CLI, REST API, MCP, etc.)
Just install and publish with one line.
htmlship publish context.html
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Is HTML the new Markdown? Had a lot of thoughts on Thariq's latest article so obviously I had to make it a vid
Thariq@trq212
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To be honest, today the renderer is locked to default-src 'none' with no script-src, so CDN scripts still get blocked even with sandbox_mode: "relaxed".
The field is stored, but the view headers don’t use it yet. I should make that clearer in the docs, that one’s on me.
It ships strict because free HTML hosting with scripts can attract phishing kits and wallet drainers fast. But your workflow is totally legit, and I’d love to support it safely. Let me think through the right approach. Really appreciate you flagging it!
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@cesc__ one thing to double check - what's the CSP behavior there? specifically whether sandbox_mode: "relaxed" allows the page to load an external script like:
@tailwindcss/browser@4.2.4/dist/index.global.js" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/@tailwindc…
Lavish publishes the HTML with DaisyUI + Tailwind browser runtime as public CDN assets, which keeps payload size sane. but if relaxed mode still uses the current strict CSP with no script-src, the shared page may not work properly
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@kunchenguid Wow, you made it! I love the AI-era developer community. People are turning ideas into real things in minutes!
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@liu8in @HyperFrames_ And you can share your plan, review or any HTML output easily via htmlship. (npx, Python, CLI, MCP, etc.)
Just install and publish with one line.
Feel free to embed it in HyperFrames or HeyGen if you wish.
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why we chose HTML for @HyperFrames_ ?
this.
the final touch that matters.
click - edit - preview - ship.
🚢
HeyGen@HeyGen
Every edit was a round-trip through the model Font swap. Color change. Nudge 20 pixels. Adjust an easing curve. Now they're a click in the Inspector panel @HyperFrames_ Inspector is live npx hyperframes preview Full source code for this video in the replies ↓
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@kunchenguid Yes, that should be enough for quick publishing, but let me share the full API doc too. Feel free to use it as you wish.
And here’s a live example using htmlship 😅
view.htmlship.com/d9omc48d
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@cesc__ i checked htmlship.com and the REST API seems like easy enough to integrate - is that the recommended way to go?
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@kunchenguid Wow, that’s a great idea! Let’s make people cook and ship 🚢 I can share the API docs if you’re ready to go!
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@kunchenguid It has an expiration period, so it’s meant more for quick sharing. For people who need longer storage, I might offer a paid option.
Btw, your workflow is really cool!
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@AndrewYNg Prof. Ng, I hope you’re right, but unemployment isn’t the only risk.
The number of high-skill jobs may shrink as many “qualified” roles turn into AI-executed work supervised by less specialized people. Only a small set of roles may become more valuable.
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There will be no AI jobpocalypse.
The story that AI will lead to massive unemployment is stoking unnecessary fear. AI — like any other technology — does affect jobs, but telling overblown stories of large-scale unemployment is irresponsible and damaging. Let’s put a stop to it.
I’ve expressed skepticism about the jobpocalypse in previous posts. I’m glad to see that the popular press is now pushing back on this narrative. The image below features some recent headlines.
Software engineering is the sector most affected by AI tools, as coding agents race ahead. Yet hiring of software engineers remains strong! So while there are examples of AI taking away jobs, the trends strongly suggest the net job creation is vastly greater than the job destruction — just like earlier waves of technology. Further, despite all the exciting progress in AI, the U.S. unemployment rate remains a healthy 4.3%.
Why is the AI jobpocalypse narrative so popular? For one thing, frontier AI labs have a strong incentive to tell stories that make AI technology sound more powerful. At their most extreme, they promote science-fiction scenarios of AI “taking over” and causing human extinction. If a technology can replace many employees, surely that technology must be very valuable!
Also, a lot of SaaS software companies charge around $100-$1000 per user/year. But if an AI company can replace an employee who makes $100,000 — or make them 50% more productive — then charging even $10,000 starts to look reasonable. By anchoring not to typical SaaS prices but to salaries of employees, AI companies can charge a lot more.
Additionally, businesses have a strong incentive to talk about layoffs as if they were caused by AI. After all, talking about how they’re using AI to be far more productive with fewer staff makes them look smart. This is a better message than admitting they overhired during the pandemic when capital was abundant due to low interest rates and a massive government financial stimulus.
To be clear, I recognize that AI is causing a lot of people’s work to change. This is hard. This is stressful. (And to some, it can be fun.) I empathize with everyone affected. At the same time, this is very different from predicting a collapse of the job market.
Societies are capable of telling themselves stories for years that have little basis in reality and lead to poor society-wide decision making. For example, fears over nuclear plant safety led to under-investment in nuclear power. Fears of the “population bomb” in the 1960s led countries to implement harsh policies to reduce their populations. And worries about dietary fat led governments to promote unhealthy high-sugar diets for decades.
Now that mainstream media is openly skeptical about the jobpocalypse, I hope these stories will start to lose their teeth (much like fears of AI-driven human extinction have).
Contrary to the predictions of an AI jobpocalypse, I predict the opposite: There will be an AI jobapalooza! AI will lead to a lot more good AI engineering jobs, and I’m also optimistic about the future of the overall job market. What AI engineers do will be different from traditional software engineering, and many of these jobs will be in businesses other than traditional large employers of developers. In non-AI roles, too, the skills needed will change because of AI. That makes this a good time to encourage more people to become proficient in AI, and make sure they’re ready for the different but plentiful jobs of the future!
[Original text in The Batch newsletter.]

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@peyton_mcmanus @AndrewYNg Exactly.
“However, if your job is moving things around on a screen, you can probably be displaced\replaced at a cheaper rate.”
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I'm not sure that I agree with your assessment here.
We are certainly in the beginning of a huge, huge transition. For compute, we are in the upward swing of a massive S curve transition - that will ripple way beyond compute and software development. For software development, I feel like I'm 2 miles offshore, am riding the tsunami, and have a sense of what is about to hit other industries. For software, I think we will just see a ton of new apps, a bunch of new companies, and probably a rethink of the OS.
Will we adapt - yes. Will some people thrive - yep.
However, if your job is moving things around on a screen, you can probably be displaced\replaced at a cheaper rate. Think of the displacement brought on with globalization but now across all industries - and roles being absorbed into models and harnesses.
It took 10 to 20 years for the US to really recognize the damage done by globalization - and the political, economic, regional wrecking ball it unleashed.
Our politics, and policy people, are way behind the curve on this - and the rate of change that we are looking at is substantial - and faster and less costly than moving a factory overseas (i.e globalization).
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@korhandayii @sezeriltekin @grok arkadaş Claude uygulamasında, bir mesajda 2 dosyadan fazlasını neden upload edemiyor olabilir?
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@cesc__ @sezeriltekin claude uygulamasına , terminalden değil
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@sezeriltekin maksimum bende 2 dosya atılıyor onu 3 4 5 e çıkartabiliyoruz mu
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@aniruddhadak @ai_for_success Not only that, it was presented in the openai summer update
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For 2.5 years, I have been using GitHub Copilot on VS Code as an annual subscription holder. However, the terms of my annual purchase were changed while the purchase period was still in progress. Not only was access to Opus models cut off, but it was also announced that a credit system is going to be launched at the end of the month. This is really disappointing and it is also upsetting to start looking for a new provider.
Anyway, thank you for 2.5 years of AI-assisted development.
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🤖 GitHub Copilot Dev Days Online runs May 25–27.
Join livestreams in Brazilian Portuguese, Spanish, English, and Simplified Chinese to build faster with AI and explore agentic development in @code.
aka.ms/ghcp-online

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@warpdotdev Much more better than the HTML hype that increases token consumption by 10-15x while ensuring readability. Congrats 👏
If you still prefer html, try htmlship
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