Lucas Teixeira
2.3K posts

Lucas Teixeira
@prilosac
https://t.co/Exlra1aseZ. SWE. Current: @ Prescription Care Management. Prev: @syncurity (acq. by @swimlane) Owner @leme_tech. Travel, invest, play a videogame now and then



@p3ery @chrisbanes @opencode we are likely going to make this change soon it's a bummer because our data actually shows very little impact in costs. and for many people costs actually go down and perf goes up because context usage stays small but there's weird perception around this so we have no choice



Day 2 of requesting @theo to add openrouter and other openai base url compatible providers to t3 code



Hating on something but having to defend it because the haters are hating on it WRONG



To manage growing demand for Claude we're adjusting our 5 hour session limits for free/Pro/Max subs during peak hours. Your weekly limits remain unchanged. During weekdays between 5am–11am PT / 1pm–7pm GMT, you'll move through your 5-hour session limits faster than before.






@levelsio Is there a good way to jump between tmux sessions on Termius? I find it quite hard to manage multiple codex/claude sessions on the go


10 years ago today Amine released his debut single “Caroline.” It peaked at #11 on the Billboard Hot 100 and is certified 6x platinum.





What if a codebase was actually stored in Postgres and agents directly modified files by reading/writing to the DB? Code velocity has increased 3-5x. This will undoubtedly continue. PR review has already become a bottleneck for high output teams. Codebase checked-out on filesystem seems like a terrible primitive when you have 10-100-1000 agents writing code. Code is now high velocity data and should be modeled at such. Bare minimum, we need write-level atomicity and better coordination across agents, better synchronization primitives for subscribing to codebase state changes and real-time time file-level code lint/fmt/review. The current ~20 year old paradigm of git checkout/branch/push/pr/review/rebase ended Jan 2026. We need an entirely new foundational system for writing code if we’re really going to keep pace with scale laws.










