Saša Blagojević

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Saša Blagojević

Saša Blagojević

@blackcat_dev

Problem solver, mostly #php #kotlin | coffee and code addict | amateur buddhist | whiskey connoisseur

Banja Luka, Serb Republic, BiH Tham gia Mart 2014
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Saša Blagojević
Saša Blagojević@blackcat_dev·
I think this might be the longest blog post I've ever written. Kinda ironic considering it's about a Kotlin library and Java world is famous for its verbosity 🤣 sasablagojevic.com/writing-and-pu…
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SkalskiP
SkalskiP@skalskip92·
RF-DETR is the best open-source choice if you work with aerial or satellite images in this specific project, RF-DETR Medium outperformed YOLO26 fine-tuned on the same dataset by 12 mAP in object detection, that is a huge gap link: github.com/roboflow/rf-de…
SkalskiP@skalskip92

i’m working on geo rf-detr this time i fine-tuned rf-detr on neontreeevaluation dataset; it gives you insight into forest health, tree counts, and land changes without manual field surveys what other aerial / drone use cases should i try next?

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Jack McDade
Jack McDade@jackmcdade·
I'm having the worst time trying to replace my LG 5K monitor after the display port died. I tried the new BenQ 5k (MA270S) designed for MacBooks but it sucked – none of the controls were native (e.g. keyboard brightness keys don't work, volume control is on the monitor w/ cheap plastic buttons, etc) and the night shift/true tone implementation was terrible. It felt like a $200 monitor with a $1k price tag. So I returned it and just bought the new Studio Display 2, but it has so many bugs it's ridiculous. It doesn't wake w/ the MBP, I have to unplug and plug it back in. The webcam features don't work (no option for Studio Light, Center Stage, Portrait Mode, etc), and half the time the non-Thunderbolt USB ports don't work. At all. Oh and if you're in clamshell mode you can't control screen brightness or use the webcam at all either. So I submitted a return order and bought a used Studio Display 1 but thought hey, lets try that Nano Texture, I've got some glare. Wellll my eyes are wigging out after just 10 minutes and I can't do it. It's all blurry and I feel a headache coming on. 🫠 How's your week going?
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Elvis
Elvis@elvissun·
this thread is what mass cope from legacy devs looks like. i talked to @FastCompany about why @garrytan's "AI slop" is actually the future of software engineering. the mass code review. the line-by-line gatekeeping. the "craftsmanship" that was really just slow iteration disguised as rigor - that era is over. and the engineers who built their entire identity around it are panicking. @gregorein brags about burning 3 billion tokens last year while dunking on garry for flexing lines of code. i've burned 6.6 billion in the past three months on codex alone. by his own logic, i'm 8x as credible. see how silly that sounds? yes, he found real issues. yes, they got fixed. that's exactly the point. karpathy's autoresearch proved this already - AI agents can solve very complex problems just by operating inside feedback loops, iterating to optimize a loss function. this is what software engineering is now - gradient descent. ship, measure, self-correct, repeat. all by the agent itself. this is the new startup playbook. your job isn't to review every line before deploy. your job is to build systems where agents observe outcomes - mrr, analytics, error rates, user behavior - and self-improve. the engineer's role shifts from gatekeeper to building the machine that builds the machine. you could run this level of audit (using AI) on any production site and find the same issues - most just don't have a billionaire CEO attached for virality. mocking the people who adapted is easier than adapting. but the craft is evolving whether you like it or not.
gregorein@Gregorein

so... I audited Garry's website after he bragged about 37K LOC/day and a 72-day shipping streak. here's what 78,400 lines of AI slop code actually looks like in production. a single homepage load of garryslist.org downloads 6.42 MB across 169 requests. for a newsletter-blog-thingy. 1/9🧵

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Dmitrii Kovanikov
Dmitrii Kovanikov@ChShersh·
There’s an important distinction here. Bad music doesn’t hurt anyone. Bad software does. Unless we bully all devs into caring about the craft, we’ll be living in the world where your payments get failed, you can’t book air tickets, you wait 20 seconds for the website to load, you overload support with tons of requests because your website is shite, you private data will leak, you have to reenter visa form 20 times because refresh loses all the files in data, you can’t close the website or lose the internet while you’re uploading a 5 MB PDF that takes forever, and so on. The world without demand for quality is the world of endless frustration.
@levelsio@levelsio

I've been "shamed" so many times for not doing things properly in coding, using PHP and jQuery and SQLite in 2026 etc But it's all worked out fine for me and I've always made security a priority so never got hacked etc So for me the Garry Tan thing is like the "real" devs once again gatekeeping, out of fear non-coders are now entering their scene, even if they have a point (like exposing tests in front end sure okay) But look at ANY scene, like music too, and you always have the old people gatekeeping the new people And yes the new people suck and do things differently but at some point they won't suck and their way of doing becomes the new standard which I think it will be

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Mondo.ba
Mondo.ba@mondobh·
Kad gradonačelnik priča o Londonu, mi se sjetimo Banjaluke Kad najavljuje "Lokomotive promjena", mi svakodnevno svjedočimo infrastrukturnim banalnostima, jer možda imamo “moćnu” zgradu kao u Londonu (i bolju ako pitate njega), ali šahtovi i slivnici su ipak druga priča...
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the tiny corp
the tiny corp@__tinygrad__·
If you have a Thunderbolt or USB4 eGPU and a Mac, today is the day you've been waiting for! Apple finally approved our driver for both AMD and NVIDIA. It's so easy to install now a Qwen could do it, then it can run that Qwen...
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Gergely Orosz
Gergely Orosz@GergelyOrosz·
This Delve story is going from “very bad” to “beyond very bad.” Apparently Delve’s founders were so shameless that they 1. Charged a fellow YC company (Sim) their full free for “auditing” (that turned out to be fake) 2. Then ripped off Sim’s IP, and sold it to customers for $$
Ryan@ohryansbelt

Delve, the YC-backed compliance startup that allegedly faked hundreds of SOC 2 and ISO 27001 audits, is now accused of stealing a fellow YC company's IP. According to Part 2 of DeepDelver's Substack series, Delve took SimStudio's code, removed attribution, rebranded it "Pathways," and started closing $50k-$200k+ enterprise deals with it while telling Sim's founders the ROI wasn't there for a partnership. Here's the breakdown: > Sim (YC X25) signed on as a Delve compliance client for $15k covering SOC 2 Type 1, Type 2, and HIPAA. CEO Karun Kaushik personally promised to handle onboarding > During that same April 2025 sales call, Karun posted a SimStudio link internally with the note "ui inspo for pathways" > Linear tickets referencing "sim studio" under the Pathways project started appearing that same month. An internal Notion doc titled "Sim Studio Port Plan" lists specific folders to copy, including blocks, components, the executor, tools, handlers, and database schema Delve's production code still contains SimStudio references and docs[.]simstudio[.]ai URLs > When Sim's CEO @Emkara tried to sell Delve a licensing deal, Karun said it didn't have "high enough ROI rn" and stopped responding > Sim had no idea Delve was selling their product as Pathways until DeepDelver's Part 1 article. Emir confirmed over email that no white-label or attribution agreement existed > Leaked pitch decks show Delve selling Pathways to Brex, Anthropic, Gusto, and Notion. The Notion deal was $50k+ > The Brex deck promises Pathways will make their GRC team "AI native" and includes a 50%+ partnership discount > The Anthropic deck, dated January 9, 2025, proposes a 1-2 week PoC with named Delve staff building custom Pathways workflows > Delve outsourced Pathways maintenance to a dev shop in Bangladesh > Sim's open source license required attribution. Delve removed it, told clients they "built it from the ground up," and did not disclose Sim's code during Series A due diligence

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Vjekoslav Krajačić
Vjekoslav Krajačić@vkrajacic·
Deleting code is the best kind of engineering. Period. Simplicity > Lines of code. While the whole world of vibe coders brags about pushing tens of thousands of LOC a day, I'm actually happier when my codebase shrinks every now and then, usually when I spot repeating patterns and extract reusable code into a better architecture. File Pilot is only a little above 100k LOC right now, which I already consider a lot. And I've been working on it for 4 years straight. So when I see people here talking about how they push thousands of LOC a day, I'm like... there is no way in the world you understand that code and all the implications of all the pieces that have to communicate with each other. You're gonna lock yourself so fast, into a place of such complexity that not even AI will be able to help. And for what? Speed? In generating mediocre junk code. You only value your time. I value my users time. We're not the same.
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Grady Booch
Grady Booch@Grady_Booch·
Here is my prediction: The Magnificent Seven - Alphabet, Amazon, Apple, Meta, Microsoft, Nvidia, and Tesla - will continue to push AI down our throats despite diminishing returns to its users, simply because they’ve invested so much they’ve gone past a point of no return. That notwithstanding, the inevitable Great Implosion will happen to companies such as Anthropic and OpenAI because open source models that can be run locally - with minimal capex and zero risk of surveillance - are quickly and irreversibly becoming good enough. The whole ”AGI is just around the corner” is a meaningless and silly distraction.
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AA
AA@measure_plan·
i made tetris but the board and pieces are attached to your body and it's quite tiring to play
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Gergely Orosz
Gergely Orosz@GergelyOrosz·
Ironic how Anthropic sells Claude Code security reviews positioned as something v powerful (costing $15-25 per PR review), and being clear they use it on all PRs... then leaking all of Claude Code's code thanks to publishing their sourcemap. AI won't save you from yourself!
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4nzn
4nzn@paoloanzn·
so claude code's entire safety system for "dangerous" cyber security work is just...a text prompt literally replace it with an empty string and recompile. thats it. enjoy your unrestricted version
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zek
zek@zekramu·
Garry Tan should be inspiring bc he is living proof you can “make it” whilst having 0 fucking brain cells.
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Ivan Velichko
Ivan Velichko@iximiuz·
My development approach (since ca. 2021) - maximize isolation & minimize blast radius: - Never install any dev tools on the main system - Never run npm/pip/etc install locally - Use a VM per project/group of related projects - Never share prod credentials with dev VMs - Never forward SSH keys to dev VMs - Use a highly guarded "deploy machine" as a bastion to access production - Make sure no release pipelines can be triggered by a public PR or a push from a dev VM If a single dev VM is compromised by a supply chain attack or, since recently, a rogue agent, I tear it down (or seal it for further investigation) and provision a replacement. If back in 2021 it felt like a stretch, today it's rather a necessity given how much the supply chain attacks have accelerated.
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