Manan Ramnani

245 posts

Manan Ramnani

Manan Ramnani

@ramnanimanan

Software Engineer | BITSian

Bengaluru Katılım Mart 2014
339 Takip Edilen32 Takipçiler
Manan Ramnani
Manan Ramnani@ramnanimanan·
@gdb @gdb are we getting a limit reset after the bug resolution of codex ?
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Harshil Mathur
Harshil Mathur@harshilmathur·
AI calls are getting common and hard to identify. I now have my own anti-captcha 😅
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Manan Ramnani
Manan Ramnani@ramnanimanan·
@badlogicgames @pierceboggan do we know why the response times of a model are so fast in pi compared to copilot app/cli/vscode ? Even the quality is higher and number of tool calls are lesser in pi. @github please ship a barebones version of copilot 🥲
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Andrej Karpathy
Andrej Karpathy@karpathy·
Personal update: I've joined Anthropic. I think the next few years at the frontier of LLMs will be especially formative. I am very excited to join the team here and get back to R&D. I remain deeply passionate about education and plan to resume my work on it in time.
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Harshil Mathur
Harshil Mathur@harshilmathur·
Slash is awesome. 1000+ people used it in the last 2 weeks. 1000+ PRs merged. 97% success rate. But it isn’t the stats. The fact that it lives inside Slack has changed the culture. Not just engineers - PMs, support, sales, account managers, everyone now casually pulls Slash into conversations. People joke with it, debate with it, ask it random questions and treat it like a teammate.
Shashank Kumar@shashank_kr

We recently built an AI assistant inside @Razorpay called Slash. It reads our entire codebase, debugs production incidents, reviews specs, writes code, reviews every single PR, answer tech queries and also raises PRs for small features. It's easily accessible through Slack. We can tag it in any Slack thread, describe the problem in English, and it gets to work. Six weeks ago, Slash handled 122 tasks in its first week. Last week it handled 14000+. Queries, analysis, bug fixes, PR reviews, test runs and work that earlier lived across scattered tools and teams can now be done with Slash right within Slack. 1000+ people used it in a single week because it got their work done faster. The whole adoption has been completely organic. The numbers from last week have been very encouraging - 14,854 tasks completed. 2,150 PRs raised, 1,152 merged, 45% of those PRs shipped with zero human rework. A payout gets stuck mid-retry during a live incident, an engineer tags Slash and within seconds, it cross-references logs with code and pinpoints a state machine bug blocking the retry-to-failed state transition. Tells the team exactly which logs to check and how to resolve the incident. With its K8s analyzer skill, Slash scanned a single namespace, right-sized all 11 workers using 48-hour P95 pod metrics, and raised the PR. One run saved $560/month. A marketing banner bug was fixed with few prompt iterations with a PR raised, merged to prod and deployed in minutes. No front-end developer touched the code. Security teams ran static security testing and remediation through Slash at org scale. Thousands of findings were purged and many more got validated autonomously. But Slash isn't just an engineering tool. Account managers now trace stuck customer payments and integration failures through Slash instead of pinging engineers on Slack. L2 product support tickets get triaged by Slash before they reach engineering. 250+ non-engineers ran thousands of sessions last week. PMs used it for research on our payments infra, customer interviews and product features sometimes raising PRs of their own. Analytics teams built SQL pipelines. 11% of all sessions came from people outside tech and product. On our company bakkar (watercooler) Slack thread, someone asked Slash jokingly to assign tasks to everyone and it responded in the same tone. It seamlessly started participating in inside jokes and conversations. The quality compounds with use. Engineers who shipped 11+ Slash PRs averaged a 63% merge rate without rework. First-timers averaged 37%. Across the org, human review comments per PR have dropped more than 40% with Slash starting to do in-depth review of every single change. We're still early. Large cross-repo refactors, fully agentic sdlc and plan mode are next. But Slash has already changed how people at Razorpay build, debug, and ship every day.

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Mitchell Hashimoto
Mitchell Hashimoto@mitchellh·
I strongly believe there are entire companies right now under heavy AI psychosis and its impossible to have rational conversations about it with them. I can't name any specific people because they include personal friends I deeply respect, but I worry about how this plays out. I lived through the great MTBF vs MTTR (mean-time-between-failure vs. mean-time-to-recovery) reckoning of infrastructure during the transition to cloud and cloud automation. All those arguments are rearing their ugly heads again but now its... the whole software development industry (maybe the whole world, really). It's frightening, because the psychosis folks operate under an almost absolute "MTTR is all you need" mentality: "its fine to ship bugs because the agents will fix them so quickly and at a scale humans can't do!" We learned in infrastructure that MTTR is great but you can't yeet resilient systems entirely. The main issue is I don't even know how to bring this up to people I know personally, because bringing this topic up leads to immediately dismissals like "no no, it has full test coverage" or "bug reports are going down" or something, which just don't paint the whole picture. We already learned this lesson once in infrastructure: you can automate yourself into a very resilient catastrophe machine. Systems can appear healthy by local metrics while globally becoming incomprehensible. Bug reports can go down while latent risk explodes. Test coverage can rise while semantic understanding falls. Changes happens so fast that nobody notices the underlying architecture decaying. I worry.
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Pau Labarta Bajo
Pau Labarta Bajo@paulabartabajo_·
Real-time audio transcription. Entirely on-device. This hands-on tutorial shows you how to build it from scratch. No cloud dependencies, no API calls, complete privacy, using LFM2.5-Audio-1.5B by @liquidai Enjoy ↓ github.com/Liquid4All/coo…
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Manan Ramnani
Manan Ramnani@ramnanimanan·
@mitsuhiko @badlogicgames Wow ! So what is the solution? Sticking with node and building a better dependency resolution / package manager ?
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Armin Ronacher ⇌
Armin Ronacher ⇌@mitsuhiko·
Pi wouldn’t make any sense in rust or go. Extensibility is key to it. That leaves ruby, python, js, php for the most part unless you want to ship an interpreter. None of those languages have any benefit over node.
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Manan Ramnani
Manan Ramnani@ramnanimanan·
@mitsuhiko Just thinking out loud. Not sure how much the bridge penalty is. Less chances of dependency/supply chain attacks in cargo maybe ? Codex does this way afaik, hence the suggestion.
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Armin Ronacher ⇌
Armin Ronacher ⇌@mitsuhiko·
@ramnanimanan What would the benefit of that be? It just adds a huge amount of complexity for the bridge.
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Timothy Wang
Timothy Wang@timwangyc·
Introducing Ponder: the agentic video editor. It’s a new paradigm for filmmaking, where powerful creative agents and humans collaborate to tell world-class stories. We're also announcing our $2.5M pre-seed, led by Liu Jiang from Sunflower (@seedtosunflower), with @Joshuabrowder and @MattHartman. Joined by @levie (Box), @emerywells (Frame), @JaredLeto, @CommaCapital, the @nyuniversity venture fund, @cory, @darian314, @shiffman, and many more incredible founders, investors, and creators.
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banteg
banteg@banteg·
codex macos app has gotten so good, some friends are buying their first mac just for it
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Manan Ramnani
Manan Ramnani@ramnanimanan·
Hahaha. I guess negative reinforcement works, and thats why I love codex. most would be me telling codex about the mess claude made.
Manan Ramnani tweet media
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Manan Ramnani
Manan Ramnani@ramnanimanan·
Hey @thsottiaux , functionalities around browser and chrome plugin are breaking a lot. A bit brittle. Randomly stops working. Windows user
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CNBC-TV18
CNBC-TV18@CNBCTV18News·
Bengaluru couple Danish Abdi & Vrushali Prasade swam from Sri Lanka to India. The 10-hour swim was 'a mixed bag of emotions,' Danish Abdi tells @ArchanaaSolanki. The duo says swimming the 'English Channel' is their next big target. #SriLanka @CNBCTV18PrimeIN @ShereenBhan
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Oren Melamed
Oren Melamed@OrenMe·
Look at this fancy new model and effort selector in @code insiders Just missing context window selector now :-)
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