Rama Dev
780 posts

Rama Dev
@ram4_dev
Software Developer at @mercadolibre | Bootstrapping my life | Building High Impact Startups at Argentina🇦🇷 https://t.co/Nk7X9pCTXU

Sigue @ram4_dev en el primer evento de OpenAI Codex Community Buenos Aires hablando de SDD, agentes y subagentes con Codex. @OpenAIDevs



🔥OpenAI Devs Primer evento Codex Community de Agentes IA en 🇦🇷 🗓️AGENDA @yaniacosta__ Automatizando riesgos en minutos @ram4_dev SDD+Arquitectura Multiagente @agusegui Recreando procesos en la era de agentes @arthard101 Automatizando las compras del super Registro gratis👇



every ai company that has raised a lot of money is probably building a github competitor rn

If you work for OpenAI, Anthropic or xAI Please add a 'model'=>'latest' value so I can stop having to change model every 6 months!



🔥OpenAI Devs Primer evento Codex Community de Agentes IA en 🇦🇷 🗓️AGENDA @yaniacosta__ Automatizando riesgos en minutos @ram4_dev SDD+Arquitectura Multiagente @agusegui Recreando procesos en la era de agentes @arthard101 Automatizando las compras del super Registro gratis👇

POV: claude traveled 6 months into the future and told you exactly how your next move failed. it's called a premortem. daniel kahneman (nobel prize-winning psychologist behind "thinking fast and slow") called it his single most valuable decision-making technique. google, goldman sachs, and procter & gamble all use it before major launches. here's the problem it solves. when you ask claude "is this a good plan?" it finds all the reasons to say yes. that's what it was trained to do. so you walk away feeling confident. you execute, and spend weeks / months building on top of that plan. then it blows up. and you realize the problem was obvious in hindsight, you just never stress-tested it because claude told you it was solid. a premortem fixes this by flipping the frame. instead of asking "what could go wrong?" you tell claude "it's 6 months from now and this is already dead. tell me how it died." that shift turns off claude's optimism because there's nothing to be optimistic about. the premise already says it failed. so claude stops looking for reasons your plan will work and starts explaining how it fell apart. claude comes back with every way your plan could die, each one with a full failure story and the early warning signs to watch for. then a synthesis pulls it all together: > which failure is most likely > which failure is most dangerous > the single biggest hidden assumption you're making (often the most valuable part) > a revised version of your plan with the gaps closed you say "premortem this" and give it your plan. the skill handles the rest.

🔥OpenAI Devs Primer evento Codex Community de Agentes IA en 🇦🇷 🗓️AGENDA @yaniacosta__ Automatizando riesgos en minutos @ram4_dev SDD+Arquitectura Multiagente @agusegui Recreando procesos en la era de agentes @arthard101 Automatizando las compras del super Registro gratis👇












