legu
41 posts

legu
@legudev
On my journey through the jungle of software development to satisfy my technical curiosity💻 Interests: webdev, coding, Finance Father and husband





I've been running five @AmpCode coding agent instances for a couple months. One little piggy works on Emacs. One little piggy builds Node. One little piggy ports old tests. One little piggy reviews code. And one little piggy does wee wee wee random crap the other piggies can't be bothered with. Right now Piggy Five is porting old scripts from Ruby to Kotlin. My piggies are the best. I love Amp. I love coding this way. I'm working via deep, ongoing conversations, keeping my piggies on track and accountable. It was not easy to learn how to work like this. It has been a journey full of traps and surprises. But it has paid off in droves. At least, it has for Anthropic, who bilk me, sorry I mean *bill me, for a few hundred bucks a week. There are naysayers. I can share with you the secret sauce they are all missing. Is it money, you ask? Well, sure. None of us have enough money for this shit. Mostly, though, it's patience. The only way you can be successful with agentic coding is through patience, persistence, and low expectations. Coding agents aren't a panacea. They can't cure cancer. They can't even be trusted. You have to be very patient with them. But they work. The piggy farmers who learn to use multiple coding agents are two to five times faster than you. That's a big difference. And companies are starting to take notice. Be the farmer. Not the piggy.





Wir sind live Zeuge, wie sich zwei Präsidenten vor laufenden Kameras streiten. Verrückte Zeiten, verrückt.












