Nechiforel David Samuel

580 posts

Nechiforel David Samuel

Nechiforel David Samuel

@nsdhso

Available for work

Katılım Kasım 2022
66 Takip Edilen35 Takipçiler
Nechiforel David Samuel
why @github I must to press on the title to open the details, why is not enough to press only on the card ?
Nechiforel David Samuel tweet media
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Dep
Dep@0xDepressionn·
Google's CEO "any solo developer with Claude can now outcompete a 10-person Google team" he's right but 90% of developers using Claude Code daily are starting from zero every session no stack context. no memory. no behavior rules. $975 wasted per developer every single week Sundar is talking about the future. here's the setup that makes the present actually work:
Dep@0xDepressionn

x.com/i/article/2055…

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LakeSail
LakeSail@LakeSailHQ·
Spark rebuilt in Rust — no JVM, 8x faster, 94% less cost.
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Movez
Movez@0xMovez·
Anthropic AI engineer just showed how to give AI agents real memory in 4 steps - and it changes everything in 28 minutes he shows exactly how agents can remember across sessions, completely free worth more than any $500 AI engineering course here's what he covers: • why agents forget everything between sessions • memory stores - agents read, write across sessions • dreaming - agents that improve their own memory • 95% cache hit rate, so it stays cheap most people are still copy-pasting context into every new chat - while the people who figured this out are building agents that get smarter every single night watch full video then read article below
Codez@0xCodez

x.com/i/article/2058…

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Nechiforel David Samuel
would the @zeddotdev be interested in a PR that adds single-click toggle selection to the Git History tab? Clicking a commit would highlight it with element_selected color, clicking again removes the highlight. Currently the History list has no selection state.
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Marc Backes
Marc Backes@marcba·
As I have mentioned a few times already, we still need GREAT ENGINEERS. At @directus we are looking for Senior Rust engineers 🦀 Check out this opportunity to work with a phenomenal team 👇 directus.io/careers/senior…
Marc Backes tweet mediaMarc Backes tweet media
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Zed
Zed@zeddotdev·
We ❤️ the Netherlands!
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Dep
Dep@0xDepressionn·
Karpathy's 4 rules took coding accuracy from 65% to 94%. most devs haven't read them. the ones who did set up 21 rules total. 82,000 people on GitHub figured this out. you're looking at all 21. save this
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Dep@0xDepressionn

x.com/i/article/2055…

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Zed
Zed@zeddotdev·
🚀 We shipped v1.3 yesterday. Here are the highlights! Terminal Threads have landed. Open a terminal right in the Threads Sidebar and run claude, codex, or any other CLI agent alongside your built-in agent threads. zed.dev/blog/terminal-…
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CyrilXBT
CyrilXBT@cyrilXBT·
Obsidian + Claude Code = 24/7 personal operating system. Works while you sleep. The people who build this tonight will never work the same way again. Watch it and Bookmark it now.
CyrilXBT@cyrilXBT

x.com/i/article/2056…

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Sprytix
Sprytix@Sprytixl·
A 19-YEAR-OLD MAKES $23,000/MONTH WITH 8 AI CODING AGENTS RUNNING ON A SERVER AND MANAGES ALL OF THEM FROM HIS PHONE he calls them his minions. while most developers sit at a desk waiting for code to compile, he set up 8 parallel sessions on a remote server and now runs his entire operation from his phone screen anywhere in the world. the setup is simple - tmux sessions living on a server, SSH connection from his phone, and a terminal that resizes itself depending on whether he's on mobile or desktop. every keystroke from his phone shows up on the server in real time. 8 agents working simultaneously. $0 spent on office. $23,000/month coming out the other side. he literally left his desk and his codebase kept building itself.
Sprytix@Sprytixl

x.com/i/article/2054…

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R𝛼m🦅
R𝛼m🦅@rambuilds_·
15 AI related accounts you should follow on Twitter: 1. @karpathy His tweets already create LLMs narratives that you later see on linkedin in 2 months. 2. @fchollet posts thoughtful research on intelligence, benchmarks, and AI limitations. Keras creator + ARC-AGI 3. @ylecun Yann LeCun is Deep learning pioneer & Meta Chief AI Scientist; big-picture research takes and critiques (and drama). 4. @AndrewYNg Andrew Ng is AI education legend; practical ML advice, courses, and real-world implementation. creator of deeplearning ai 5 @rasbt Sebastian Raschka posts on Practical ML/LLM implementations, "build from scratch" tutorials, and books. 6. @dair_ai Weekly ML/AI paper threads and accessible research explainers (high-signal for staying current). 7. @lilianweng Lilian Weng is ex-OpenAI and her Lil'Log-style threads are good. has In-depth LLM research breakdowns 8. @jeremyphoward posts interesting takes on AI/crypto news, and works on democratizing practical deep learning and accessible education. 9. @simonw Simon post Practical LLM tools, takes, experiments, prompting, and engineering breakdowns. django co-founder 10. @_akhaliq Curates the latest arXiv papers, model releases, and open-source AI drops. 11. @ID_AA_Carmack AGI/low-level optimization takes that makes you think about the problem. 12. @gwern Really high-quality long-form AI research notes and essays. 13. @goodside LLM evaluation, prompting research, and real capabilities testing 14 @drfeifei Computer vision pioneer; human-centered AI and spatial intelligence research 15 @demishassabis Been following his work for 9 years. Demmis is my hope against google usurpating their power with AI. Demmis is google DeepMind's CEO Let me know who I missed guys and save it for future
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Zed
Zed@zeddotdev·
Big diff go brrrrr
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Vikas Kapadiya
Vikas Kapadiya@KapadiyaVikas·
@zeddotdev Can you please work on the search UI. I want to press enter , it should start searching as I type.
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Eduardo barbosa
Eduardo barbosa@alisbliuXD·
@nsdhso @zeddotdev Understood 🫡 So it's all about time to they launch more features (without start to feel slow) and then they can become the best code editor
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Eduardo barbosa
Eduardo barbosa@alisbliuXD·
@nsdhso @zeddotdev I've never used Zed but I was considering to use, but reading to what you said bring me some questions because what you asking for looks so "basic" in the development... What makes you use Zed instead of another Code Editor (like Cursor, VS Code, Antigravity...)?
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Gergely Orosz
Gergely Orosz@GergelyOrosz·
Anders Hejlsberg (@ahejlsberg) is a living legend: he created Turbo Pascal, Delphi, C# and TypeScript (and today TypeScript is the most-used programming language, globally, as per GitHub.) Timestamps: 00:00 Intro 02:48 How Anders got into programming 05:40 Building his first compiler 07:44 Turbo Pascal 12:25 Delphi 14:53 Joining Microsoft 19:41 Building C# 29:11 Async/await 34:01 The rise of JavaScript 37:52 Building TypeScript 42:58 How the TypeScript compiler works 48:30 JavaScript’s strengths and weaknesses 52:18 How Anders uses AI 56:03 What language features work well with AI 1:02:49 How software craftsmanship is changing 1:07:49 Performance and efficiency 1:09:29 Anders’ tool stack 1:11:30 A 30-year career at Microsoft 1:13:40 Book recommendation Brought to you by: @AntithesisHQ – verify your system’s correctness without human review or traditional integration tests – and avoid bugs or outages. antithesis.com/pragmatic @WorkOS – Everything you need to make your app enterprise ready. WorkOS.com @turbopuffer – a vector and full-text search engine built on object storage. It’s fast, cheap, and extremely scalable. turbopuffer.com/pragmatic Four things that stood out to me: 1. “10x better for 1/10th of the price” is a proven winner. This is what Turbo Pascal did: it sold for $49.95 when competing compilers cost $500, and it was faster and more interactive than competitors’ products. Conveniently, the low price tag also killed off piracy 2. C# might have not existed without a famous court case. Microsoft originally hired Anders to architect its Java tools (Visual J++), but the Sun versus Microsoft lawsuit (1997-2001) meant Microsoft could not build on top of Java, as the company that owned Java’s IP (Sun) sued MS for alleged unauthorized changes to the Java language. Microsoft realized it had to build a new language that combined VB’s productivity with C++’s power. This led to C# and .NET. 3. TypeScript exists because Anders refused to build Script# for the Outlook .com team. Microsoft’s Outlook .com team asked Anders’ C# team to productize “ScriptSharp,” a language to cross-compile C# to JavaScript. Anders and the C# team pushed back, suggesting that a better approach was to fix JavaScript. Anders felt strongly that to be attractive to the best-of-breed developers in the JavaScript ecosystem, you want people to write JavaScript, and not another language like C#. 4. Designing a programming language is a 10-year play. As Anders puts it: “Version one is great, but has all sorts of issues. You’ve got to do version two, but it’s not until version three that it really starts to be great. Then you’ve got to convince people to adopt it.”
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