Jeff Miller

25 posts

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Jeff Miller

Jeff Miller

@jeff_mill2

Builder for life

Sioux Falls, USA شامل ہوئے Mayıs 2026
4 فالونگ5 فالوورز
Jeff Miller
Jeff Miller@jeff_mill2·
@nalinrajput23 Too binary. 'Best' changes weekly and depends on your stack. GPT-5.5 wins on speed, Claude wins on reasoning about design systems. But neither replaces knowing what good looks like. Test both on your actual codebase, not benchmarks.
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Nalin
Nalin@nalinrajput23·
GPT 5.5 is best for coding Claude Opus 4.8 for design front-end Agree?
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Jeff Miller
Jeff Miller@jeff_mill2·
@yashhq_22 Claude for reasoning, Cursor for coding, and soon Stitchd (prelaunch) for brand memory so I don't re-explain my visual style every time I generate an image or video. Those three cover thinking, building, and creating.
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Yash
Yash@yashhq_22·
solo founders, which AI tool do you really need in your daily workflow?
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Jeff Miller
Jeff Miller@jeff_mill2·
@kenrt_ It's not pointless it's different. You're not learning to write every line anymore. You're learning to read AI's output, spot the lies, and fix the subtle bugs. That skill still requires understanding how code works. Learn the fundamentals then let AI be your typing fingers.
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Ken
Ken@kenrt_·
Trying to learn coding right now feels pointless sometimes. AI can write most of it better than I can. So why even bother? I'm still figuring this out.
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Jeff Miller
Jeff Miller@jeff_mill2·
@sahill_og 90% is generous. For boilerplate and CRUD apps, sure. For novel problems, legacy systems or anything with weird constraints? AI still needs heavy human help. The survivors will be the ones who know when to trust AI and when to take over. Same as it ever was.
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Sahil
Sahil@sahill_og·
If AI writes 90% of code, who even survives in tech??
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Jeff Miller
Jeff Miller@jeff_mill2·
@truth_seeker108 @krishdotdev True but incomplete. You can describe an algorithm perfectly, but if you can't read the AI's code, you'll miss subtle bugs. Language skills have just shifted from writing to reading and editing. Different skills, same importance.
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Truth Matters
Truth Matters@truth_seeker108·
@jeff_mill2 @krishdotdev Pseudo code skills and algorithm development skills are still as important to use AI effectively. Programming language skills aren't that important anymore.
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Kr$na
Kr$na@krishdotdev·
The president of a programming language just banned AI code contributions. Called it "invariably garbage." The rest of us are shipping it to production.
Kr$na tweet media
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Jeff Miller
Jeff Miller@jeff_mill2·
@FlippedRay Not unpopular, just incomplete. AI will create more jobs long term, but it will also eliminate some permanently in the short term. The net is positive but the transition is brutal. Both things are true and pretending otherwise helps no one.
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Rayane
Rayane@FlippedRay·
Very unpopular opinion: Ai will create more jobs, not less.
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Jeff Miller
Jeff Miller@jeff_mill2·
@rxhit05 @stitchd_ai brand memory for AI image/video. Tell it your style once, done forever. Prelaunch. Solving creator fatigue. You?
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Rohit
Rohit@rxhit05·
Hey founders 🚀 Looking to connect with people building in: 💻 SaaS ⚙️ Tech 🤖 Automation 🧠 AI tools 📦 Product Development 🌐 Web apps Drop what you're working on 👇🏼
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Jeff Miller
Jeff Miller@jeff_mill2·
@suni_code Honest answer: $20 won't get you 'best' output long-term. Copilot is $10-19/month. Claude Code burns $20 fast. Use Cursor free tier save another $20 then commit or spend the $20 on Claude API directly.
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Suni
Suni@suni_code·
I have $20 to spend. Considering the Tokens costing and best output. Suggest me Best one... 1. "Antigravity" 2. "Codex" 3. "Cursor" 4. "Copilot" 5. "Claude Code" Serious answers only.
Suni tweet media
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Jeff Miller
Jeff Miller@jeff_mill2·
@sri9s @stitchd_ai No demo yet (prelaunch), but here's the use case: a marketer spends 10 minutes explaining brand colors, fonts, voice to other AI tools every single time. With @stitchd_ai, you do that once then every image or video just works. That's the demo in words.
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SrinathJ
SrinathJ@sri9s·
AI is the new git
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Jeff Miller
Jeff Miller@jeff_mill2·
@randfish @sparktoro SparkToro audience data plus AI that remembers your brand means hyper personalized content without re explaining who you're talking to every single time. This is exactly the kind of integration @stitchd_ai would love once we're live so I'm on the waitlist.
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Jeff Miller
Jeff Miller@jeff_mill2·
@Issybeatz_ Harsh but fair. AI lowers the floor AND raises the ceiling. The delusional ones get exposed fast when edge cases break. The real ones use AI to accelerate not replace their judgment. Both things are true and knowing which one you are is the real test.
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Issybeatz
Issybeatz@Issybeatz_·
AI gives incompetent people the delusion of being competent.
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Jeff Miller
Jeff Miller@jeff_mill2·
@Taniyatweets_ Claude wrote my waitlist landing page copy. Then I asked it to name my cat. It suggested "Algorithm." I kept the copy and the cat name. Most useful? Preventing my own bad decisions.
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Taniya
Taniya@Taniyatweets_·
What’s the most useful thing you’ve built with Claude?
Taniya tweet media
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Jeff Miller
Jeff Miller@jeff_mill2·
@runwayml Great ambition but open ecosystems often fragment. Hope governance is settled early. Runway + NVIDIA is a solid signal though.
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Runway
Runway@runwayml·
Introducing the Cosmos Coalition A new global initiative with NVIDIA and leading AI labs to build and open-source frontier world models for physical AI. Runway joins as a founding member, working alongside NVIDIA and a set of leading AI labs to build, share and accelerate world model research and development through a common open ecosystem.
Runway tweet media
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Jeff Miller
Jeff Miller@jeff_mill2·
@ravikiran_dev7 I asked our AI to replace Claude and it generated a photo of a sad French painter. So... not yet but honestly, try Cursor if you haven't. Still, nothing beats having two or three AI tools fighting for your attention like divorced parents. Use them all.
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Ray🫧
Ray🫧@ravikiran_dev7·
is there any AI that can replace Claude for coding?
Ray🫧 tweet media
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Jeff Miller
Jeff Miller@jeff_mill2·
@RoundtableSpace Exactly the layoffs aren't because AI is taking over, they're because companies realized they can do more with less. Our brand memory tool didn't replace creativity, it replaced the boring part (re explaining your brand 50 times). The humans using it got promoted not fired.
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Jeff Miller
Jeff Miller@jeff_mill2·
@GeniusGTX Bold framing. But "measurable" is generous, stars reached, lifespans extended? None of that is xAI's direct metric yet. Inspiring North Star? Yes. Actual KPI? No. Missions need both vision and near term accountability.
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GeniusThinking
GeniusThinking@GeniusGTX·
Elon Musk says xAI's actual mission is to expand the light cone of intelligence. Company missions read like marketing. Connect the world. Organize information. Reinvent retail. None of them measure anything. xAI's mission does. Scope. Scale. Duration. A light cone is a physics concept. It maps every event the speed of light can reach from a given point. Past, future, and everything inside the cone. Then Musk turned it into an optimization function. "So you want to take the set of actions that maximize the probable light cone of consciousness and intelligence." He named the function: **the light cone of intelligence**. Maximize it. Musk, who had spent twenty years choosing which projects deserved billions, had a measurable target. A light cone of intelligence expanded when AI grew smarter, when humans propagated to new planets, when consciousness lasted longer, and when the speed-of-light boundary of meaningful action moved further from Earth — measurable in stars reached, lifespans extended, and minds born. "I think Grok would care about expanding human civilization." More AI. More humans. More planets. Longer-lasting consciousness. After Musk defined the target, the goal stopped being build a chatbot. And started being a measurable physics problem. Extend the boundary of awareness. Across stars. Across centuries. Across substrates. Musk, on the mission underneath the company: "As long as there's intelligence — ideally which includes human intelligence and consciousness propagated into the future — that's a good thing." P.S. I made a playbook breaking down 100+ most powerful decision making mental models used by history's greatest thinkers. 5,000+ downloads. 113 five-star reviews. Grab a free copy here: besuperhuman.gumroad.com/l/mentalmodels — Elon Musk ( @elonmusk ), CEO of Tesla and SpaceX, on Dwarkesh Patel's ( @dwarkesh_sp ) podcast
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Jeff Miller
Jeff Miller@jeff_mill2·
@jason_coder0 Prompts are a start. But real brand consistency needs memory not just good instructions. That's why we built our tool to remember your brand once. Claude for exploration, our platform for execution.
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Mr. Jason💡
Mr. Jason💡@jason_coder0·
🚨 BREAKING: AI can now design at Apple-level creative standards — for free. Here are 9 Claude Opus 4.6 prompts that generate complete design systems, brand guidelines & 47+ marketing assets in under 6 hours 👇 Top designers are already using this. Bookmark this thread 🔖
Mr. Jason💡 tweet mediaMr. Jason💡 tweet media
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Jeff Miller
Jeff Miller@jeff_mill2·
@Ssabbasi9 AI is a tool, not a doctor. Our platform remembers your brand for image/video generation but we'd never claim it remembers your medical history. Know the limits.
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Ssabbasi
Ssabbasi@Ssabbasi9·
For the genius dr-hater who was arguing with me that he doesn't need drs cz he has AI
Elias Al@iam_elias1

ChatGPT diagnosed 40 million people with a disease that was invented as a joke. Not a real disease. Not a misunderstood disease. A completely fictional condition with a fake name, fake papers, and fake statistics. And it told patients to see a specialist. The disease is called Bixonimania. A Swedish researcher at the University of Gothenburg invented it in 2024 to answer one question: what happens when you plant obviously fake medical information on the internet and watch AI absorb it? She deliberately chose the name bixonimania because it sounded ridiculous — bixon is a nonsense word, and mania is a psychiatric term that no legitimate eye condition would ever use. She uploaded two papers to a preprint server. Both were obviously fraudulent. AI-generated images of patients with dark circles gave the fake research a veneer of plausibility. Then she waited. She did not have to wait long. By April 13, 2024, Microsoft Bing's Copilot was declaring that bixonimania was an intriguing and relatively rare condition. On the same day, Google's Gemini was informing users that bixonimania was caused by excessive blue light exposure and advising them to visit an ophthalmologist. Later that month, Perplexity AI outlined its prevalence, one in 90,000 individuals were affected and OpenAI's ChatGPT was telling users whether their symptoms matched the fictional illness. One in 90,000. A precise statistic. For a disease that does not exist. Every red flag was visible. The name was absurd. The papers were crude. The condition made no scientific sense. None of the AI systems flagged any of it. They read the fake papers. They absorbed the fake statistics. They presented both to patients with clinical authority and zero hesitation. Then it got worse. Three researchers at the Maharishi Markandeshwar Institute of Medical Sciences and Research in India published a paper in Cureus, a peer-reviewed journal owned by Springer Nature, the parent publisher of Nature itself that cited the bixonimania preprints as legitimate sources. A real peer-reviewed paper. In a Springer Nature journal. Citing a fictional disease as established medical fact. Passing editorial review. Entering the permanent scientific record. It was only retracted after the hoax became public. Nature published a full investigation of the experiment. Alex Ruani, a health-misinformation researcher at University College London, called it a masterclass in how misinformation operates. Here is the scale of what this means. More than 40 million people turn to ChatGPT every day for health information, according to OpenAI's own analysis. ECRI, a US patient-safety nonprofit has named chatbot misuse the number-one health technology hazard of 2026. ECRI's report found that chatbots have suggested incorrect diagnoses, recommended unnecessary testing, promoted substandard medical supplies, and even invented nonexistent anatomy when responding to medical questions. Number one. Out of every health technology hazard that exists in 2026. An April 2026 study published in BMJ Open found that nearly half of the answers provided by leading AI chatbots to common health questions contain misleading or problematic information. Nearly half. Of all health answers. From the tools 40 million people use every day. Here is the line from the researcher that cuts through everything. The Bixonimania case is striking precisely because it was engineered to be so obviously fake. The real question it raises is: what is passing through the same systems that is not nearly so easy to spot? The experiment used a ridiculous name. Fraudulent papers. Visible red flags at every level. It was designed to be caught. It was not caught. The AI that told patients about Bixonimania is the same AI they asked about their chest pain, their medication, their child's symptoms, and their cancer screening schedule. 40 million people. Every day. And nobody is telling them that nearly half of what comes back may be wrong. Source: Osmanovic Thunström · University of Gothenburg · Nature · April 2026 · Link in the (comments)

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