Jack Burrr

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Jack Burrr

Jack Burrr

@jack_burrr

Designer engineer building everyday. - https://t.co/GVaOITMdNP - https://t.co/viUL6KUaoL - https://t.co/qGtQi0dGAb - https://t.co/KZemziudXr - https://t.co/hDGBngUFE5

Remote Katılım Ağustos 2024
229 Takip Edilen23 Takipçiler
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Jack Burrr
Jack Burrr@jack_burrr·
2025 has been the year I figured out what I actually enjoy. For me, that's building things from scratch, making them useful, and sharing the process. Currently, I'm shipping indie apps and documenting the journey. If that sounds interesting, give me a follow.
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Jack Burrr
Jack Burrr@jack_burrr·
I don't know Rust. Yet I built a PDF extraction tool in Rust that is 73x faster than existing Python implementations One of the most interesting opportunities for developers is rewriting existing tools in faster languages. github.com/jackburrus/rip…
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sachin.
sachin.@sachinyadav699·
Every idea feels taken. Every API already exists. Every SaaS has 12 competitors. So what do we even build now?
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Jack Burrr
Jack Burrr@jack_burrr·
@linuz90 @openclaw Totally agree, way too much maintenance. Just plug into the existing tools like GitHub projects or Todoist for a task manager. Reinventing the wheel
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Fabrizio Rinaldi
Fabrizio Rinaldi@linuz90·
I really don’t get all these @openclaw “mission control” and dashboard projects. It defeats the purpose. I now have this brilliant assistant with amazing context that does all sorts of things, reports back, proactively pings etc. The fact that it doesn’t have a UI *is a feature* for me. I can relate to the nerd urge to build a dashboard for it, but I feel like not having one is kinda the point?
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Jack Burrr
Jack Burrr@jack_burrr·
@johnrushx @karpathy I built out a dashboard like this too but it felt like too much complexity to maintain when I could just use github projects and keep all my tasks at the repo level.
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John Rush
John Rush@johnrushx·
@karpathy in 1 day I built a project control center for all my 20+ startups. Whenever I dreamt about such tool, i thought that one day I'll hire a team to build it just for me in about 12 months. here I am, 12 hours later it's done & it's so good. I think people gonna pay $$ for this
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Andrej Karpathy
Andrej Karpathy@karpathy·
Very interested in what the coming era of highly bespoke software might look like. Example from this morning - I've become a bit loosy goosy with my cardio recently so I decided to do a more srs, regimented experiment to try to lower my Resting Heart Rate from 50 -> 45, over experiment duration of 8 weeks. The primary way to do this is to aspire to a certain sum total minute goals in Zone 2 cardio and 1 HIIT/week. 1 hour later I vibe coded this super custom dashboard for this very specific experiment that shows me how I'm tracking. Claude had to reverse engineer the Woodway treadmill cloud API to pull raw data, process, filter, debug it and create a web UI frontend to track the experiment. It wasn't a fully smooth experience and I had to notice and ask to fix bugs e.g. it screwed up metric vs. imperial system units and it screwed up on the calendar matching up days to dates etc. But I still feel like the overall direction is clear: 1) There will never be (and shouldn't be) a specific app on the app store for this kind of thing. I shouldn't have to look for, download and use some kind of a "Cardio experiment tracker", when this thing is ~300 lines of code that an LLM agent will give you in seconds. The idea of an "app store" of a long tail of discrete set of apps you choose from feels somehow wrong and outdated when LLM agents can improvise the app on the spot and just for you. 2) Second, the industry has to reconfigure into a set of services of sensors and actuators with agent native ergonomics. My Woodway treadmill is a sensor - it turns physical state into digital knowledge. It shouldn't maintain some human-readable frontend and my LLM agent shouldn't have to reverse engineer it, it should be an API/CLI easily usable by my agent. I'm a little bit disappointed (and my timelines are correspondingly slower) with how slowly this progression is happening in the industry overall. 99% of products/services still don't have an AI-native CLI yet. 99% of products/services maintain .html/.css docs like I won't immediately look for how to copy paste the whole thing to my agent to get something done. They give you a list of instructions on a webpage to open this or that url and click here or there to do a thing. In 2026. What am I a computer? You do it. Or have my agent do it. So anyway today I am impressed that this random thing took 1 hour (it would have been ~10 hours 2 years ago). But what excites me more is thinking through how this really should have been 1 minute tops. What has to be in place so that it would be 1 minute? So that I could simply say "Hi can you help me track my cardio over the next 8 weeks", and after a very brief Q&A the app would be up. The AI would already have a lot personal context, it would gather the extra needed data, it would reference and search related skill libraries, and maintain all my little apps/automations. TLDR the "app store" of a set of discrete apps that you choose from is an increasingly outdated concept all by itself. The future are services of AI-native sensors & actuators orchestrated via LLM glue into highly custom, ephemeral apps. It's just not here yet.
Andrej Karpathy tweet media
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Jack Burrr
Jack Burrr@jack_burrr·
I've thought a lot about this in terms of do you "build it or buy it". In the next few years the answer will be build it, and there will be a booming ecosystem of tools to help anyone build the niche tool that came in a random thought. Exciting times!
Andrej Karpathy@karpathy

Very interested in what the coming era of highly bespoke software might look like. Example from this morning - I've become a bit loosy goosy with my cardio recently so I decided to do a more srs, regimented experiment to try to lower my Resting Heart Rate from 50 -> 45, over experiment duration of 8 weeks. The primary way to do this is to aspire to a certain sum total minute goals in Zone 2 cardio and 1 HIIT/week. 1 hour later I vibe coded this super custom dashboard for this very specific experiment that shows me how I'm tracking. Claude had to reverse engineer the Woodway treadmill cloud API to pull raw data, process, filter, debug it and create a web UI frontend to track the experiment. It wasn't a fully smooth experience and I had to notice and ask to fix bugs e.g. it screwed up metric vs. imperial system units and it screwed up on the calendar matching up days to dates etc. But I still feel like the overall direction is clear: 1) There will never be (and shouldn't be) a specific app on the app store for this kind of thing. I shouldn't have to look for, download and use some kind of a "Cardio experiment tracker", when this thing is ~300 lines of code that an LLM agent will give you in seconds. The idea of an "app store" of a long tail of discrete set of apps you choose from feels somehow wrong and outdated when LLM agents can improvise the app on the spot and just for you. 2) Second, the industry has to reconfigure into a set of services of sensors and actuators with agent native ergonomics. My Woodway treadmill is a sensor - it turns physical state into digital knowledge. It shouldn't maintain some human-readable frontend and my LLM agent shouldn't have to reverse engineer it, it should be an API/CLI easily usable by my agent. I'm a little bit disappointed (and my timelines are correspondingly slower) with how slowly this progression is happening in the industry overall. 99% of products/services still don't have an AI-native CLI yet. 99% of products/services maintain .html/.css docs like I won't immediately look for how to copy paste the whole thing to my agent to get something done. They give you a list of instructions on a webpage to open this or that url and click here or there to do a thing. In 2026. What am I a computer? You do it. Or have my agent do it. So anyway today I am impressed that this random thing took 1 hour (it would have been ~10 hours 2 years ago). But what excites me more is thinking through how this really should have been 1 minute tops. What has to be in place so that it would be 1 minute? So that I could simply say "Hi can you help me track my cardio over the next 8 weeks", and after a very brief Q&A the app would be up. The AI would already have a lot personal context, it would gather the extra needed data, it would reference and search related skill libraries, and maintain all my little apps/automations. TLDR the "app store" of a set of discrete apps that you choose from is an increasingly outdated concept all by itself. The future are services of AI-native sensors & actuators orchestrated via LLM glue into highly custom, ephemeral apps. It's just not here yet.

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Jack Burrr
Jack Burrr@jack_burrr·
@rileybrown Agreed, the companies have gotten incredibly got at bit detection and it really harms your reach.
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Riley Brown
Riley Brown@rileybrown·
I recommend not uploading to social media platforms via APIs. I’ve talked to some insiders at social media companies. You will want the platforms to think you’re a human.
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Jack Burrr
Jack Burrr@jack_burrr·
@WallStreetApes It’s true we are being taxed to death but these hotel taxes are particularly bad in NYC
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Wall Street Apes
Wall Street Apes@WallStreetApes·
This is CRAZY American is going to New York for one night, so she needs to book a hotel. She shows the breakdown of the cost for a one night stay These are all the taxes and hotel fees being charged just to stay one night Americans are being taxed to death
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Jack Burrr
Jack Burrr@jack_burrr·
@jackfriks Gemini 3 has been working pretty well for me
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jack friks
jack friks@jackfriks·
other than claude what is the best model to run openclaw with? want to try out some other models that don’t cost too much and are still decent at basic tasks (bonus points for personality like claude)
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Jack Burrr
Jack Burrr@jack_burrr·
The more I dig into App Store optimization, the more I realize I haven't even cracked 1/10th of what's possible. This rabbit hole goes deep.
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Jack Burrr
Jack Burrr@jack_burrr·
Download Cradle Log, no sign-up, start tracking in 30 seconds. 🔗 apps.apple.com/us/app/cradle-… If you're expecting, a new parent, or know someone who is, I'd really appreciate an RT.
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Jack Burrr
Jack Burrr@jack_burrr·
Free to start. $4.99 one-time to unlock everything. No subscriptions. No recurring fees. Pay once, yours forever.
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Jack Burrr
Jack Burrr@jack_burrr·
I'm getting married next month and it sounds crazy, but I'm already thinking about the kind of dad I want to be. I can't control when that happens, so I did the only thing I know how, I built something. Introducing Cradle Log. A tracking app for newborns. I would love feedback🧵
Jack Burrr tweet media
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Kritika
Kritika@kritikakodes·
Best auth solution for startups? 1) Clerk 2) Firebase Auth 3) Supabase 4) Custom auth (💀)
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Marshall
Marshall@mdnlabs·
Tell me you're a developer without telling me you're a developer.
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Appwrite
Appwrite@appwrite·
What are you building right now? 👇
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