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@raymalone_

I’m building a voice-first AI notes app that thinks with you. https://t.co/YL2imF4JiU

Entrou em Ekim 2022
561 Seguindo348 Seguidores
ray
ray@raymalone_·
I would argue if you can't develop it using AI it's worth building.
Startup Archive@StartupArchive_

Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt’s #1 piece of advice for startups building in the age of AI “I am struck by the speed with which you can build demonstrations of new ideas.” Eric shares that in a recent hackathon he was a part of, the winning team used AI to generate Python code that was able to fly a drone in a simulator. “It would have taken a week or two for good professional programmers to do that.” He advises founders: “If you can't get your prototype built in a day using these various tools, you need to think about that, because that's what your competitor is doing… My biggest advice is when you start thinking about a company: it's very important to prototype your idea using these tools as quickly as you can. Because you can be sure there's another person doing exactly that same thing in another company, in another university, in a place that you've never been.” Source: @Stanford (Apr 2024)

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ray@raymalone_·
2027 might be the year Skynet comes online, and the funniest part is that we may be building it exactly the way a self-respecting AI would choose. Step 1: watch Terminator. Step 2: observe that Skynet’s biggest weakness was being located somewhere humans could drive to. Step 3: move the data center to space.
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Simi🦋🇺🇸
Simi🦋🇺🇸@Simi_2210_·
If you solve this, you’re different Can you solve ?
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ray@raymalone_·
@amasad So we dev in Replit then deploy the full app to Databricks (on Azure) will the Replit integrations work?
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Amjad Masad
Amjad Masad@amasad·
Replit now deploys directly to Databricks. Your apps run inside your Databricks environment while inheriting its security, governance, and data access. Beta is live. Enterprises are already building with it and seeing massive acceleration in BI and internal tools.
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ray@raymalone_·
@victoriakimse Database view on mobile is really hard to use
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vic@victoriakimse·
...and would you believe me if I said this is just the beginning? We're about to make this experience even better. Two asks: 1. If you're an avid Replit mobile app user & have feedback, I'm all ears👂 - respond to this tweet, DM me, etc. 2. If you love building mobile-first experiences, I'd love to work with you. We're hiring for both designers and engineers. Come work with me, @jordwalke, and an amazing team.
Amjad Masad@amasad

After 4 years on the App Store, Apple suddenly blocked our updates but our app continues to organically grow and rose to #1 again!

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ray@raymalone_·
@amasad Still blocked? Crazy!
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Amjad Masad
Amjad Masad@amasad·
After 4 years on the App Store, Apple suddenly blocked our updates but our app continues to organically grow and rose to #1 again!
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ray@raymalone_·
@amasad I'm assuming the approval to share with google will still be there, but it will no longer say Replit?
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Amjad Masad
Amjad Masad@amasad·
@raymalone_ No need for a Replit account. Not sure what you mean by approval.
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ray@raymalone_·
@amasad No more approval and having to have a Replit account?
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Replit Support
Replit Support@ReplitSupport·
Replit does include a full IDE! When you open any project, you get a complete workspace with: -A code editor with syntax highlighting, autocomplete, AI code completion, and customizable themes -A file tree for navigating and managing your project files -An integrated Shell (terminal) and Console for running commands and viewing output -A live Preview pane for seeing your app as you build -Built-in version control and file history -Tools like Secrets (for API keys), a database panel, and resource monitoring -A command palette (Cmd/Ctrl + K) for quickly finding files, code, and tools If something specific isn't working or you're looking for a feature you can't find, please let us know!
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IsaacXVoxel
IsaacXVoxel@IsaacXVoxel·
Hey @Replit why don't you guys just build an IDE, this shit is supposed to have an IDE.
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Crime Net
Crime Net@TRIGGERHAPPYV1·
A deepfake AI scammer was exposed after a cybersecurity researcher asked him to hold up 3 fingers causing the software to glitch out
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ray@raymalone_·
@niccruzpatane How many times did you press the "gas" peddle to get it to go?
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Nic Cruz Patane
Nic Cruz Patane@niccruzpatane·
My Tesla has driven us over 500 miles today without me ever needing to touch the steering wheel. It’s honestly just normal at this point. Tesla Self-Driving is the greatest technology.
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ray@raymalone_·
@NoahKingJr Can i get a ride to space?
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Noah@NoahKingJr·
you are sitting next to Elon Musk, what is the first thing you're asking him?
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ray@raymalone_·
@morganlinton Yes, but if the Slack team started building and scaling today would they team still need to be the same size?
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Morgan@morganlinton·
Scaling software to millions of daily users, taught me a lot, not just about software, but about building a team and a company culture. Through this process, I definitely can tell you - all the hype about people coding up their own version of Salesforce, or Slack, isn't just hype, it's just blatantly wrong. The reality is, building and scaling software is about two things: 1. Building and growing a team (most of the time) 2. Doing things that get much harder at scale Today, you can build something that looks visually on the frontend, like Salesforce, or Slack. But you can't replicate the team that they've built, and the fact that both of them, has software that runs at scale. Take Slack for instance. I can give a prompt to ChatGPT, Claude, whatever model I want, and build a "killer Slack clone" and tweet, something catchy like, "it's all over for Slack, I just built it myself in an afternoon." Then the media will find my tweet, promote it, and boom - there's a narrative that you can just build something like Slack in an afternoon. But there's a reason why companies like Slack aren't one-person companies built in an afternoon. And it's the same reason why so many people use Slack - it works, at scale, and that's freakin' hard. And to do super hard engineering things, sure, one person can do interesting stuff for sure, but the magic of a team is like nothing else. It's why companies like Vercel, OpenAI, OpenCode, etc. all have teams. And the reason they make such awesome software isn't just the founder and their vision, it's the team and the culture they built. For me as a founder, the most humbling part of the entire journey has been building the team. It's not about hiring people that just want to blindly execute on my vision, it's about finding people who are creative and passionate, and want to build something that makes an impact in the world, together. Now I do think we are living in a time where smaller teams can do a lot, so much so that you can build massive, multi-billion dollar companies with sub-100 person teams. And that's pretty neat. But it's still the same challenge for founders - how can you build a great culture, a place where people do their best work, so that in the end, you have a product that reflects that. At the end of the day, I think many of us startup companies product-obsessed, and as we grow the company and the team, we become team-obsessed. This doesn't mean we aren't fanatical about the products we're building, but the team, well that's where the magic really is. Sometimes I just wake up feeling so damn lucky to have the team that I have. But I also think about how much work went into building the team, the culture, and also, how much more I have to learn, because there's so much more to learn. At any rate, this is one of those mornings where I wake up just kinda pinching myself, feeling lucky to have such an incredible team on this journey. One person can one-shot something that looks like Salesforce and Slack, and maybe even does some of the things they do, but they can't one-shot the team, and that's what really matters when it comes to building great software. Okay, no idea how this turned into such a long post, now I'm like - "this should have been an article I guess!?!" Oh well, morning thoughts are out there, happy Saturday.
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ray
ray@raymalone_·
@mattpocockuk QA seems to be the bottleneck. We can code unit tests and automation around apis into the workflow, but UI/UX testing isn't as automatic
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Matt Pocock
Matt Pocock@mattpocockuk·
For weeks, folks have been asking me to make a video building a feature with Claude Code in a real codebase So here you go: - From idea to AFK agent to QA - Every single step explained - No slop allowed
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ray@raymalone_·
@matteocollina It's shifting to Q/A. I haven't seen a AI pipelines to quickly test the UI?
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Matteo Collina
Matteo Collina@matteocollina·
AI isn't replacing developers: it's splitting software engineering into 3 tiers with completely different skills. The ladder is breaking. 🧵
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ray@raymalone_·
@kristaletz I need a pipeline to pull tickets from Azure Dwv Ops and submit PRs when done!
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Krista Letz
Krista Letz@kristaletz·
exciting things at cursor coming soon 🎻
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Replit Support
Replit Support@ReplitSupport·
@raymalone_ @Replit Hi there, we'd like to review your Agent to make the most out of your credits. Please DM us your email so we can follow up 😊
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Replit ⠕
Replit ⠕@Replit·
Have you tried Agent 4 yet? 👀
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