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Ty
@ty37zhang
▲ @vercel @v0 | @nyuniversity
New York, NY Katılım Kasım 2022
255 Takip Edilen66 Takipçiler
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Ship 26 tickets just dropped.
London, Berlin, New York, Sydney, San Francisco.
Hear from customers shipping AI agents and apps to production, with talks and workshops designed to help your team do the same.
Request your ticket: vercel.com/ship
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Last chance to sign up for Slop Con
We want to empower the slop cannons/vibe coders/ product engineers to go fast and figure shit out
We'll have credits and prizes from @OpenAI, @vercel, @cursor_ai, @merit_systems, @pangramlabs, @the_superbill, @memelordtech, and more.

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We're growing the Vercel Labs team. Our mission is to build the devtools of the AI era.
We used to build tools for humans, now we're building them for agents. @ctatedev & team have shipped the tools that agents love: 𝚊𝚐𝚎𝚗𝚝-𝚋𝚛𝚘𝚠𝚜𝚎𝚛, 𝚙𝚘𝚛𝚝𝚕𝚎𝚜𝚜, 𝚜𝚔𝚒𝚕𝚕𝚜, 𝚌𝚑𝚊𝚝, 𝚓𝚞𝚜𝚝-𝚋𝚊𝚜𝚑, 𝚓𝚜𝚘𝚗-𝚛𝚎𝚗𝚍𝚎𝚛… 22.8M+ downloads to date.
Dream job. DMs open 😀
Chris Tate@ctatedev
Portless killed :3000 Dev servers got stable names like myapp.localhost Agents could use worktrees in parallel without stepping on each other Now it's easier than ever in v0.11 Just run: portless Zero config. Zero args. Zero code changes.
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We’ve identified a security incident that involved unauthorized access to certain internal Vercel systems, impacting a limited subset of customers. Please see our security bulletin:
vercel.com/kb/bulletin/ve…
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Vercel Workflows is GA.
Your code is the orchestrator. Ship agents, backends, or any long-running process without managing queues, retries, or workers. vercel.com/blog/a-new-pro…
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@iansbrash Still remember how cheap/dated they were back in 19, when everything was in stock.
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Slack was additive already, but then there’s Yogurt.
@typicalmitul can u also do a code leak like CC? I want the sauce.
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@felixleezd As a Chinese who spend half of my life in China and the rest in the states. I hate cramped design still.
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If you open a Chinese app for the first time, you’ll probably think it’s badly designed.
Too many icons and features. Everything crammed onto one screen.
If you grew up on Western apps, your instinct is immediate: this is cluttered.
But it works.
In the U.S., we’ve been trained to associate good UX with minimalism. In China, density often signals value.
Open WeChat or Alipay, and it feels overwhelming at first. Information-heavy, feature-packed.
But to local users, that density means capability. It says: everything you might need is already here in front of you.
If you enter a new market assuming your design taste equals good UX, you’ll misread the signal.
Good design is contextual.

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