Pshemyslaw

102 posts

Pshemyslaw

Pshemyslaw

@pshemyslaw

Katılım Ekim 2018
1.3K Takip Edilen35 Takipçiler
Pshemyslaw retweetledi
Grady Booch
Grady Booch@Grady_Booch·
It is a source of continuous delight to watch the AI community rediscover the fundamentals and the dynamics of software engineering as they take those things and embellish them with AI adjectives, making them sound all fresh and new and sparkly while in truth, those fundamentals remain, well, fundamental. Remove AI from the discourse below, and what Andrew promotes are things one heard all the time as we saw - starting decades ago - the transition from assembly language to FORTRAN and COBOL, from structured to object-oriented, from waterfall to agile. The past, as is said, does not repeat itself but rather rhymes. Don’t get me wrong: I celebrate what Andrew et al are doing: developing software-intense systems that are meaningful and that endure requires intention and discipline, and I embrace that. Two dangling threads before I close: I don’t grok the semantics of “traditional teams”. The cosmos of computing is so wide and deep and diverse and crosses so many domains, I conclude that “traditional teams” is what one says when their experience is in a relatively narrow space, and they are witnessing a shift from what they grew up with in the Valley in particular, where web-centric systems of global elastic scale remain the primary focus. Second, I am dismayed at the focus on speed. If you are driving head long Thelma and Louise style toward an IPO then certainly speed will be a critical factor. But for most of the domain of computing, for systems that are meaningful and that endure, other factors are far more important: correctness, repeatability, safety, maintainability, these dominate, and as such, don’t be distracted by the noise and smoke and heat and light of an AI first style that may get you out of the starting gate quickly, but will fail you in the ultra marathon of most development.
Andrew Ng@AndrewYNg

AI-native software engineering teams operate very differently than traditional teams. The obvious difference is that AI-native teams use coding agents to build products much faster, but this leads to many other changes in how we operate. For example, some great engineers now play broader roles than just writing code. They are partly product managers, designers, sometimes marketers. Further, small teams who work in the same office, where they can communicate face-to-face, can move incredibly quickly. Because we can now build fast, a greater fraction of time must be spent deciding what to build. To deal with this project-management bottleneck, some teams are pushing engineer:product manager (PM) some teams are pushing engineer:product manager (PM) ratios downward from, say, 8:1 to as low as 1:1. But we can do even better: If we have one PM who decides what to build and one engineer who builds it, the communication between them becomes a bottleneck. This is why the fastest-moving teams I see tend to have engineers who know how to do some product work (and, optionally, some PMs who know how to do some engineering work). When an engineer understands users and can make decisions on what to build and build it directly, they can execute incredibly quickly. I’ve seen engineers successfully expand their roles to including making product decisions, and PMs expand their roles to building software. The tech industry has more engineers than PMs, but both are promising paths. If you are an engineer, you’ll find it useful to learn some product management skills, and if you’re a PM, please learn to build! Looking beyond the product-management bottleneck, I also see bottlenecks in design, marketing, legal compliance, and much more. When we speed up coding 10x or 100x, everything else becomes slow in comparison. For example, some of my teams have built great features so quickly that the marketing organization was left scrambling to figure out how to communicate them to users — a marketing bottleneck. Or when a team can build software in a day that the legal department needs a week to review, that’s a legal compliance bottleneck. In this way, agentic coding isn’t just changing the workflow of software engineering, it’s also changing all the teams around it. When smaller, AI-enabled teams can get more done, generalists excel. Traditional companies need to pull together people from many specialties — engineering, product management, design, marketing, legal, etc. — to execute projects and create value. This has resulted in large teams of specialists who work together. But if a team of 2 persons is to get work done that require 5 different specialities, then some of those individuals must play roles outside a single speciality. In some small teams, individuals do have deep specializations. For example, one might be a great engineer and another a great PM. But they also understand the other key functions needed to move a project forward, and can jump into thinking through other kinds of problems as needed. Of course, proficiency with AI tools is a big help, since it helps us to think through problems that involve different roles. Even in a two-person team, to move fast, communication bottlenecks also must be minimized. This is why I value teams that work in the same location. Remote teams can perform well too, but the highest speed is achieved by having everyone in the room, able to communicate instantaneously to solve problems. This post focuses on AI-native teams with around 2-10 persons, but not everything can be done by a small team. I'll address the coordination of larger teams in the future. I realize these shifts to job roles are tough to navigate for many people. At the same time, I am encouraged that individuals and small teams who are willing to learn the relevant skills are now able to get far more done than was possible before. This is the golden age of learning and building! [Original text: deeplearning.ai/the-batch/issu… ]

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Daniel Duan
Daniel Duan@daniel_duan·
what the agent wrote
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Dator
Dator@drdator·
@shaytan_9 @pshemyslaw I prompt "make a doom-style game using webgl" whenever a new model drops and it's really interesting to see what they produce. 5.5 was quite different compared to other models (fancy 3d, shadows etc).
Dator tweet media
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Dator
Dator@drdator·
@simonw My version of this is "make a doom-style game using webgl". GPT 5.5 results are wildly different than previous models
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Simon Willison
Simon Willison@simonw·
GPT-5.5 may not be in the official OpenAI API... but it's available via the apparently approved-of Codex API backdoor So I used that to make these pelicans (default and xhigh)! simonwillison.net/2026/Apr/23/gp…
Simon Willison tweet mediaSimon Willison tweet media
Romain Huet@romainhuet

@bygregorr We want people to be able to use Codex, and their ChatGPT subscription, wherever they like! That means in the app, in the terminal, but also in JetBrains, Xcode, OpenCode, Pi, and now Claude Code. That’s why Codex CLI and Codex app server are open source too! 🙂

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Pshemyslaw
Pshemyslaw@pshemyslaw·
@twostraws awesome idea, subscribed ;) maybe this will finally make me to ship something 100%
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Paul Hudson
Paul Hudson@twostraws·
After months of work, my new app is finally available to preorder on the Mac App Store. It's called Kickstart, and it has just one job: to help indie app developers make more money on the App Store. How does it do that? Let me explain…
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Andrew Ambrosino
Andrew Ambrosino@ajambrosino·
head over to settings, set a dictation hotkey, and hold it in any text field across any app
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Andrew Ambrosino
Andrew Ambrosino@ajambrosino·
New in the Codex app: - GPT-5.5 - Browser control - Sheets & Slides - Docs & PDFs - OS-wide dictation - Auto-review mode Enjoy!
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Pshemyslaw
Pshemyslaw@pshemyslaw·
@krzyzanowskim How to change reasoning level when using Codex in Commander app?
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Marcin Krzyzanowski
Marcin Krzyzanowski@krzyzanowskim·
it goes without saying but every new model is automatically available in Commander. I don't need to make emergency updates to make it supported
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Pshemyslaw
Pshemyslaw@pshemyslaw·
@chriseidhof Yeah, very interesting idea. Coukd you share more details about it?
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Pshemyslaw
Pshemyslaw@pshemyslaw·
@Dimillian Hey @Dimillian, tried today Codex app and well, Codex Monitor feels much snappier, polished! Especially in big threads / big diffs ;) well done!
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Thomas Ricouard
Thomas Ricouard@Dimillian·
Impact of the Codex App release over Codex Monitor. Imagine if I were VC-backed lol.
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Pshemyslaw
Pshemyslaw@pshemyslaw·
@Dimillian hey @Dimillian today I tried first time CodexMonitor and works quite well so far! However, I don't understand what's the difference between "Project" and "Workspace"?
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Pedro Piñera
Pedro Piñera@pepicrft·
@steipete’s clawdis is awesome. I now understand his excitement for the tool. It can literally replace many of the apps that I was using previously. You should give it a shot: github.com/steipete/clawd…
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Investpro00
Investpro00@Investpro00·
Nie siadło 200kg (poszło 180kg)na przysiad. Nie założyłem własnej firmy (mocne GPW). Nie potrzebowałem przeszczepu włosów. 2026🔥 Odnaleźć siebie samego. Maraton. Podróżować. Czytać. Pisać. Tańczyć. Dokończyć budowę domu. #Polska #GPW
Investpro00@Investpro00

Cele na rok 2025. 1. Prawko na motor i zakup motoru. 2. Zakup nowego auta. 3. Zabieg na oczy i włosy + aparat ortodontyczny. 4. Ze 110kg na 95kg i 200kg na przysiad. 5. Oświadczyny ❤️ 6. Rozwój własnego biznesu ale tym pochwalę się za 6 miesięcy.

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Pshemyslaw
Pshemyslaw@pshemyslaw·
@Investpro00 miałem wczoraj wątpliwą przyjemność być na SOR - to co się tam odpierdala woła o pomstę do niebios
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Investpro00
Investpro00@Investpro00·
Nie chcę nawet myśleć ile wczoraj w nocy było wypadków samochodowych, złamań, zwichnięć.
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Remek Kinas
Remek Kinas@KinasRemek·
Roadmapa nauki podstawowych architektur modeli językowych - 7-9 tygodni powinno dać radę na luzie - 3x w tygodniu po 2h (by się nie przetrenować). Jeśli chcesz poznać tajemnice - jak to działa? Oczywiście jest tego zdecydowanie więcej i można szybciej - to są już szczegóły. Okienko - repo bdh dostępne na github - patrzę jak to działa. Tydzień 1. RNN/LSTM - historyczne ujęcie oraz dlaczego nie do końca dobre (choć okaże się później, że inne architektury z tego czerpią więc warto poznać). Tydzień 2. Transformer -> Encoder/Decoder -> Decoder only - tutaj oczywiście „Attention is all you need". Tydzień 3. SSM: State Space Models. Tydzień 4. RWKV: Parallelizable RNN with Transformer-level LLM Performance. Tydzień 5. HRM: Hierarchical Reasoning Model oraz może przy okazji Tiny Recursive Model (TRM). Tydzień 6. BDH: Dragon Hatchling: The Missing Link Between Transformers and the Brain. Tydzień 7-9. Później wszelkiego rodzaju dodatki, modyfikacje - MoE, DSA, MLA, hybrydy (SSM + Transformer), zmiany w pozycjonowaniu elementów atencji (pre/post normy itp), GQA, MHA, różne metody maskowania attencji, kv-cache, kombinacje rezydualne itd. Poczytać publikację ale przede wszystkim pobawić się kodem. Idealnie byłoby krok po kroku, z funkcją debuggowania, zobaczyć jak to działa „od środka".
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Pshemyslaw
Pshemyslaw@pshemyslaw·
@Investpro00 a jak tam przysiad? jest 200? Wczoraj zrobilem 200 w martwym ale na przysiad tylko 160
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Investpro00
Investpro00@Investpro00·
Zakończyłem dzisiaj sezon motocyklowy. Bez wypadku, bez żadnej obcierki. Nawet mandatu nie dostałem. Zabieram się za mocniejsze treningi, będę musiał kontynuować je nawet podczas urlopu. Mam plan żeby wykorzystać swoje ciało w celach zarobkowych. Nie będzie to OF. #Polska
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Investpro00@Investpro00

Cel nr 1. Jadę za godzinę kupić BMW S1000rr 🔥 Sprzedawca mówi, że przyjmuje gotówkę albo w krypto. Zaproponowałem przeszło 10 #ETH. Odmówił. To zostajemy przy gotówce. #GPW #Motocykl

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Michał
Michał@Michu_mistrz·
@dywidendowopl A po co goły dolar? Nie lepiej kupić jakieś dolarowe aktywa? Chociażby złoto w USD albo akcje/obligacje?
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dywidendowo
dywidendowo@dywidendowopl·
3.59 #USDPLN mówię bardzo proszę 10k zł wymienione na zielone 💲 Skupujecie czy czekacie aż będzie po 5zł dolar i dopiero wtedy buy? 🙃
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Alexander Embiricos
Alexander Embiricos@embirico·
brew install codex It’s come leaps and bounds!
Nico Müller@nicomuellerAT

@embirico codex-cli is my absolute favourite way of working right now. It's so easy to setup, straight-forward to use and powerful with GPT-5. Thanks for the awesome work!

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Pshemyslaw
Pshemyslaw@pshemyslaw·
@steipete lol and I was just wondering yesterday if there's any good TUI for Swift. Very nice!
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Peter Steinberger 🦞
Peter Steinberger 🦞@steipete·
Also let Claude run for ~6h and ported Bubbletea TUI from go to Swift: github.com/steipete/Matcha Still buggy but some examples already work. Probably needs a few more days of looping tho.
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