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@lurklaughlaunch

Obsessive Builder. Ex-APPL Ex-AMZN

Austin, TX, USA Katılım Haziran 2023
1.2K Takip Edilen596 Takipçiler
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contextty@lurklaughlaunch·
@thdxr Dream job. Compressing the codebase
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dax
dax@thdxr·
are there people out there who just want to refactor every day? just wake up and find the worst code and just chip away at it and clean it up wake up the next day do it again, infinitely improving things with zero external impact?
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Alex Bouaziz
Alex Bouaziz@Bouazizalex·
A 10-minute delay becomes a 24-hour delay by the end of the chain. Say I reply 10 minutes late to an engineer in London. He comes back an hour later, builds for two hours, and sends it to the product lead in New York at 6pm. NY has a note, sends it back at 4pm EST - but London is asleep. He wakes up, fixes it, and passes it to the team in SF. It's midnight on the West Coast, so they open it the next morning. One 10-minute delay. A full lost day. Now flip it. I reply in 30 seconds and that same chain finishes in a few hours. That expectation compounds - it spreads to your direct reports, then to theirs. Fast response culture doesn't just save time. It transforms how quickly the entire company moves. This isn't about being glued to Slack 24/7. It's about treating unblocking as your highest priority. When someone is waiting on you to keep moving, that's the thing you do first. Not after lunch or after your next meeting - now. Because you're not just making one person wait. You're making everyone downstream wait. Moving fast is about clearing hurdles - identifying what's blocking progress and getting it out of the way before it stalls the chain. @elonmusk is the best at this. He built a culture of hurdle-clearing at his companies. And what's key is that he doesn't wait for problems to surface. He goes straight to the frontline, identifies bottlenecks, and removes them in order of priority. That's the mindset. Don't wait for the perfect path. Clear what's in front of you and keep moving!
David Senra@davidsenra

Marc Andreessen: "[Elon] does a day a week at each of his companies — a 12, 14 hour stretch of design reviews. 5 minutes per engineer. 12 design reviews an hour. He does it for 10 hours a day. So Elon will do a 120 design reviews in the course of a day.

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contextty@lurklaughlaunch·
@signulll Consider this working UX detail compared to Claude Code lately. They’re mogging
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signüll
signüll@signulll·
maybe i am a freaking moron but why is dragging better than just turning it on? every other app just asks you to turn it on & it’s already there. one good reason is that we are all talking about it now, but i can’t seem to figure out the second good reason. dragging is much more of a pain but maybe it feels better psychologically or something? i don’t get it. someone explain this in plain terms to me.
Ed@trpfsu

this flow

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Lex Tang
Lex Tang@lexrus·
We need an open-source project for this awesome permissions flow
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cryingvault
cryingvault@cryingvault·
I wish I could say niggas doubted me but everyone believes in me
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Rhys
Rhys@RhysSullivan·
from my experience, even the best models (Opus 4.6, 5.4 xhigh / 5.3 codex) cannot write good code today without an amount of work that is equivalent to just doing the work myself am excited for a world where they can, but in the current state i have very low trust in them
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Based Dom NiggaButt/Acc
Based Dom NiggaButt/Acc@based_d0m·
My peptide dealer losing his mind bruh
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contextty@lurklaughlaunch·
Refactoring is like edging
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contextty@lurklaughlaunch·
946 hours saved huh
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contextty@lurklaughlaunch·
@yacineMTB I think it’s because it was April 1st and that fucks with the training data
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kache
kache@yacineMTB·
there is not a single thing that chatGPT 5.4 xhigh did today that was good. every single thing was bad
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contextty@lurklaughlaunch·
@yacineMTB Same here I thought I was going crazy
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contextty@lurklaughlaunch·
how come no one is complaining about the scroll flicker in the Codex macOS app
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contextty@lurklaughlaunch·
damn i guess i sell pillows now
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クレア
クレア@kureakurea01·
テキサスバーベキューが「アメリカの代表」と呼ばれる理由は、単に肉が大きいからでも、見た目が豪快だからでもない。あれは、アメリカという国そのものの縮図だからだ。まずアメリカ人にとって、テキサスバーベキューは開拓の記憶にふれる料理だ。 牛を追い、荒野を越え、限られた材料でどう生き延びるかを考えた時代。売り物にならない硬い部位を、時間と火と煙で価値ある一皿へ変えていった。 その発想には、アメリカが自国の美徳として語りたがるものが詰まっている。 不利な条件を工夫で覆すこと。粗野なものを誇りへ変えること。手間をかけることで、安い肉を文化へ引き上げること。 つまりテキサスバーベキューは、料理である前に「俺たちはこうやって国を作ってきた」という物語そのもの。 そして日本人にとって面白いのは、その豪快さの奥に、実はとても繊細な美学があることだ。 見た目は黒くて荒々しい。だが本質は真逆で、火加減、木の種類、燻す時間、肉の休ませ方、そのどれか一つでも狂えば台無しになる。 これはただの肉の暴力”じゃない。むしろ、素材を長い時間かけて最適な状態へ導く、非常に職人的な料理です✨ この点で、テキサスバーベキューは案外、日本の炭火焼きや煮込みや熟成文化と遠くない。 ✅派手に見えて、思想は静か。 ✅豪快に見えて、仕事は細かい。 💡ここに日本人が惹かれる余地がある。 さらに重要なのは、テキサスバーベキューが最初から完成された伝統ではなかったことだ。 カウボーイの食事に、移民が持ち込んだ技術が混ざり、保存や加工の知恵が加わり、地域ごとの木材や香りが重なって、いまの形になった。 つまりこれは「純粋な一つの文化」ではなく、混ざり合うことで強くなった文化だ。 アメリカらしさとは、しばしばこの混成の力にある。そして日本人が今それを面白がって見ているのもまた、食が国境を越える瞬間の魅力だろう。 ラーメンが日本で独自進化したように、BBQもまたアメリカの土地で再編集された移民文化の結晶なのだ。 だからこそ、今この料理が日米のタイムラインをつなぎ始めているのは象徴的。 日本人はその迫力に驚き、アメリカ人はそこに自国の誇りを見る。 けれど本当に共有されているのは、「手間をかけた食べ物への敬意」だと思う。 煙の匂い、脂の照り、黒い bark、切った瞬間ににじむ肉汁。 それを見てうまそうだと思う感覚は、国籍を越える。 言葉が違っても、食欲は翻訳される。 そして優れた食文化は、政治より先に相互理解を始める。 テキサスバーベキューが代表格と呼ばれるのは、アメリカ最大の肉料理だからではない。 アメリカとは何かを、一番わかりやすく皿の上に乗せてしまった料理だからだ。開拓、労働、移民、地域性、職人技、誇り、そして再発明。 それらが全部、煙の中で一つにまとまっている。 だから強い。 だから語られる。 だから世界に届く。 日本人へ。 あれはただの大味な肉ではない。時間を食べる料理だ。  アメリカ人へ。 あれはただの伝統料理ではない。あなたたちの歴史を今も更新し続ける料理だ。 テキサスバーベキューが偉いのは、古い料理なのに、まだ人を集められること。 そして本当に偉大な料理とはいつもそうだ。 腹を満たすだけで終わらず、文化と記憶と誇りまで一緒に燻してしまう。ほんとにすごいよね。
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contextty@lurklaughlaunch·
@adisingh Just signed 11 clients to a HIPAA compliant version of openclaw we’ve built to help cash pay healthcare clinics
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Adi Singh
Adi Singh@adisingh·
Who’s building OpenClaw for enterprises?? Been following this space closely. Think there’s a big winner that will be born here.
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Fleetwood
Fleetwood@fleetwood___·
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contextty@lurklaughlaunch·
HIPAA compliant openclaw fork has been quite the undertaking
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@levelsio
@levelsio@levelsio·
Okay let's see who can reply to this
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contextty@lurklaughlaunch·
@theo Bro what T3 is open source?! I’ve been waiting for you to put an app out for managing agents I didn’t realize it would be open source
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Theo - t3.gg
Theo - t3.gg@theo·
People keep asking me about Conductor vs T3 Code, here is my thoughts (open source ftw)
Theo - t3.gg@theo

@bnap00 Conductor has better UX still, especially around worktrees. Their Codex support is garbage. And the app lags a lot under load. T3 Code works much better with codex and slightly worse with Claude. T3 Code perf is way better. T3 Code is OSS, Conductor is not.

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