Thomas Mol

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Thomas Mol

Thomas Mol

@thomas_mol

Working on @pyannoteAI (and https://t.co/QrOOgATtAj)

Utrecht, The Netherlands Katılım Ekim 2010
194 Takip Edilen305 Takipçiler
Thomas Mol
Thomas Mol@thomas_mol·
@shadcn if building for web, then yes i change it to pointer
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Christoffer Bjelke
Christoffer Bjelke@chribjel·
domain.​com/org/:org/project/:project or domain.​com/:org/:project
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Adam Wathan
Adam Wathan@adamwathan·
Sending out tons more ui.sh invites today, make sure you look in your spam folder if you're waiting for one 🤞🏻
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Klaas
Klaas@forgebitz·
how hard is it to prompt just a little better and not have the slop ui surely we can figure out how to not make every ai website vibe the same
Klaas tweet media
Marik Hazan@MarikHazan

We just rebuilt every startup in @ycombinator's latest demo day batch. Here's what our agentic "founders" pulled off and what it means for the future of startups. Fully useable products at the bottom of the thread below 🤖🧨

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Micky
Micky@Rasmic·
i've fully switched over to sveltekit and i love it here
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Thomas Mol
Thomas Mol@thomas_mol·
@AlexanderNL Heb laatst ook zo'n fsd test mogen doen in Utrecht, ging allemaal vlekkeloos!
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calle
calle@callebtc·
I'm fascinated by this level of existential crisis developers seem to be going through. The uncomfortable truth is nobody needs you to be an artisan coder. Nobody cares about how you coded your app, or whether you feel an emotional attachment to your craft. You were always code monkey with a high enough salary to believe that your individualist craftsmanship matters to anyone. It doesn't matter to anyone but you. Not your employer, not your customer. Nobody cares about how you made the product. Nobody cares about your attachment to your process. You're experiencing the same as countless other artisans have experienced in the last century. I'm happy for you. You were starting to believe that you're a demigod amongst mortals. You're not. A machine is better than you. Now you're free.
Mo@atmoio

I was a 10x engineer. Now I'm useless.

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Drizzle ORM
Drizzle ORM@DrizzleORM·
As of today, Drizzle has become the most sustainablest ORM on Earth 🚀 PlanetScale hired entire Drizzle core team to work on Drizzle ORM full-time, which is just… WOW! I mean, I can’t believe this is happening and how amazing this is going to be... Let’s address the most important things: ▪︎ The governance of Drizzle does not and will not change ▪︎ Drizzle remains independent and open-source ▪︎ We will now work more full-timer on Drizzle ORM, Kit and Studio ▪︎ Our social media manager(me) will finally have a salary ▪︎ Drizzle v1 is going to be amazing Thank you all for using Drizzle, without you there won’t be 1.2k GitHub issues and 355 PRs, we’d live a happy life, touching grass ❤️
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Thomas Mol
Thomas Mol@thomas_mol·
@Pivot2Centre when people say they want this they mean they want something that looks like this on the outside but also have modern amenities like sewage electricity clean water and internet which should be possible btw
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Lewis 🇺🇸
Lewis 🇺🇸@ctjlewis·
In my first response to this I replied before reading beyond the first paragraph. I read the rest and it’s worse. I find it very funny when these dipshits are sent by capital to build products for you and they almost without fail are retards who don’t understand the tools or the problem. This dude is literally a layman. He is speaking like he’s new to this experience, because he is. It startled him. He doesn’t like it, and he’s attached to typing the keys. This is the type of guy they are sending to us. I wrote several more paragraphs that I’m just going to remove for good measure, but this guy does not give a fuck about the problem and that much is obvious.
Adam@adamdotdev

I find it very funny when anyone feels confident that they've figured out agentic programming, even funnier when they're trying to teach others how to do it. I've been working on OpenCode since May of last year and I still have days (like yesterday) where I'm not even sure any of this is a good idea lol I end up landing on "yes, these models are an incredible tool" but it's still all very confusing, lots of tangled thoughts and emotions and realities. I badly miss the mundane coding tasks that broke up my days/weeks, the ones where you put on the headphones and just bang out 600 lines of code. But, no question, replacing those hours of my time with a few minutes of waiting on an agent is a boost and worth being excited about, despite the mixed emotions. Then there's the distance that can creep in between you and the codebase if you start getting apathetic. I think it's pretty common at this point to make even small changes by prompting the models. It's less friction than finding the relevant code and making the change yourself. And less friction seems to win, must be some law of the universe or some shit. When most or all of your interactions with a codebase start flowing through the models, you start to lose track of where things live, which abstractions/components are carrying the weight, etc. It's a scary feeling to wake up and realizing you can't even reliably @ a precise file for a change you want to make, and you have to get more vague, leaning harder on the model. It all creeps up on you, there's an undeniable dopamine hit from using these things, and the resulting come down is predictable, like coming off a sugar high. On the positive side, it's really nice seeing other devs go through the same cycles, knowing we're all in this together and we'll ultimately figure it out.

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dax
dax@thdxr·
if you're building an app that uses LLMs you'll pay quite a lot for inference that's because inference margins are pretty high right now the profit from there goes to subsidize products that then compete against you
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Thomas Mol
Thomas Mol@thomas_mol·
@morew4rd @levelsio are you saying i should just code directly in my ./build/index.js? that is crazy, but i guess it could work
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@levelsio
@levelsio@levelsio·
I mostly just code in production now with Claude Code, way faster than this local push stuff
Leonardo Trapani@leo_trapani

@levelsio Wait once you learn what github actions are… So maybe you don’t have an agent in prod, but just build locally and push to main? I really don’t get this

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Thomas Mol
Thomas Mol@thomas_mol·
@dejavucoder How do you think we will “ask agent to do stuff”?
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sankalp
sankalp@dejavucoder·
agents/agentic actions are decreasing utility/relevance for web ui for end user since you will ask agent to do stuff... as time progresses, agents also get better at frontend. maybe we will see surge for generative ui / context based ui though but UI as we have right now is losing relevance
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Thomas Mol
Thomas Mol@thomas_mol·
that is too rigid. what if its 5pm and i want to know the weather? what if i want to know tomorrow's weather a day in advance. or next week's weather? "Give me the local weather every day at 7am" could already be automated years ago with a siri shortcut or some other cron, yet nobody does this. Instead everybody just taps once on their phone to get the weather on demand any time of day
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Robi
Robi@robiutft·
@thomas_mol @levelsio "Give me the local weather every day at 7am" No more chat. No more tapping apps
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Jon Yongfook
Jon Yongfook@yongfook·
Are the majority of replies AI now? or do people just increasingly sound like AI from overuse of LLMs in their daily life? Discuss.
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