Building a Personal AI Factory

(john-rush.com)

176 points | by derek 10 hours ago

21 comments

  • nilirl 2 minutes ago
    "Fix inputs" => The assumption is there exists some perfect input that will give you exactly what you want.

    It probably works well for small inputs and tasks well-represented in the training data (like writing code for well-represented domains).

    But how does this work for old code, large codebases, and emergencies?

    - Do you still "learn" the system like you used to before?

    - How do you think of refactoring if you don't get a feel for the experience of working through the code base?

    Overall: I like it. I think this adds speed for code that doesn't need to be reinvented. But new domains, new tools, new ways to model things, the parts that are fun to a developer, are still our monsters to slay.

  • dgunay 4 minutes ago
    I am experimenting with a similar workflow and thought I'd share my experience.

    I might be a little too hung up on the details compared to a lot of these agent cluster testimonials I've read, but unlike the author I'll be open and say that the codebase I work on is several hundred thousand lines of Go and currently does serve a high 5 to low 6 figure number of real, B2C users. Performance requirements are forgiving but correctness and reliability are very important. Finance.

    Currently I use a very basic setup of scripts that clone a repo, configure an agent, and then run it against a prompt in a tmux session. I rely mainly on codex-cli since I am only given an OpenAI key to work with. The codex instances ping me in my system notifications when it's my turn, and I can easily quake-mode my terminal into view and then attach to the session (with a bit of help from fzf). I haven't gotten into MCP yet but it's on my radar.

    I can sort of see the vision. For those small but distracting tasks, they are very helpful and I (mostly) passively produce a lot more small PRs to clean up papercuts around our codebase now. The "cattle not pets" mentality remains relevant - I just fire off a quick prompt when I feel the urge to get sidetracked on something minor.

    I haven't gotten as much out of them for more involved tasks. Maybe I haven't really got enough of a context flywheel going yet, but I do typically have to intervene most of the time. Even on a working change, I always read the generated code first and make any edits for taste before submitting it for code review since I still view the output as my complete responsibility.

    I still mostly micromanage the change control process too (branching, making commits, and pushing). I've dabbled in tools that can automate this but haven't gotten around to it.

  • simonw 7 hours ago
    My hunch is that this article is going to be almost completely impenetrable to people who haven't yet had the "aha" moment with Claude Code.

    That's the moment when you let "claude --dangerously-skip-permissions" go to work on a difficult problem and watch it crunch away by itself for a couple of minutes running a bewildering array of tools until the problem is fixed.

    I had it compile, run and debug a Mandelbrot fractal generator in 486 assembly today, executing in Docker on my Mac, just to see how well it could do. It did great! https://gist.github.com/simonw/ba1e9fa26fc8af08934d7bc0805b9...

    • low_common 5 hours ago
      That's a pretty trivial example for one of these IDEs to knock out. Assembly is certainly in their training sets, and obviously docker is too. I've watched cursor absolutely run amok when I let it play around in some of my codebase.

      I'm bullish it'll get there sooner rather than later, but we're not there yet.

      • simonw 4 hours ago
        I think the hardest problem in computer science right now may be coming up with an LLM demo that doesn't get called "pretty trivial".
        • fragmede 4 hours ago
          I think Cloudflare's oauth library qualifies https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44159166
          • gen6acd60af 1 hour ago
            This one?

            >Claude's output was thoroughly reviewed by Cloudflare engineers with careful attention paid to security and compliance with standards.

            >To emphasize, this is not "vibe coded". Every line was thoroughly reviewed and cross-referenced with relevant RFCs, by security experts with previous experience with those RFCs.

            Some time later...

            https://github.com/advisories/GHSA-4pc9-x2fx-p7vj / CVE-2025-4143

            >The OAuth implementation in workers-oauth-provider that is part of MCP framework https://github.com/cloudflare/workers-mcp, did not correctly validate that redirect_uri was on the allowed list of redirect URIs for the given client registration.

        • skydhash 3 hours ago
          Because they are trivial in a way that you can go on GitHub and copy one of those while not pretending LLM isn't a mashup of the internet.

          What people agree on being non-trivial is working on a real project. There's a lot of opensource projects that could benefit from a useful code contribution. But they only got slop thrown at them.

          • simonw 3 hours ago
            How about landing a compiler optimization in LLVM? https://simonwillison.net/2025/Jun/30/llvm/

            (Someone on here already called that a "tinkertoy greenfield project" yesterday.)

            • skydhash 2 hours ago
              I took the time to investigate the work being done there (all those years learning assembly and computer architecture come in handy), and it confirms (to me) that the key aspect of using LLM is pattern matching. Meaning you know that there's a solution out there (in this case, anything involving multiplying/dividing by a power of 2 can use such trick) and framing your problem (intentionally or not) and you'll get a derived text that will contain a possible solution.

              But there's nothing truly novel in the result. The key aspect is being similar enough to something that's already in the training data so that the LLM can extrapolate the rest. The hint can be quite useful and sometimes you have something that shorten the implementation time, but you have to at least have some basic understanding of the domain in order to recognize the signs.

              The issue is that the result is always tainted by your prompt. The signs may be there because of your prompt and not because there's some kind of data that need s to be explored further. And sometimes it's a bad fit, similar but different (what you want and what you get). So for the few domain that's valuable to me, I prefer to construct my own mental database that can lead me to concrete artifacts (books, articles, blog posts,...) that exists outside the influence of my query.

              ADDENDUM

              I can use LLMs with great results and I've done so. But it's more rewarding (and more useful to me) to actually think through the problem and learning from references. Instead of getting a perfect (or wobbly or the wrong category) circle that fits my query, I go to find a strange polygon formed (by me) from other strange polygon. Then because I know I need a circle, I only need to find its center and its radius.

              It's slower, but the next time I need another circle (or a square) from the same polygon, it's going to be faster and faster.

    • csomar 2 hours ago
      That's a very simple example/context that I suspect most LLMs will be able to knock out with minimal frustration. I had much more complex Rust dependency upgrade done on a 30+ iterations on very custom code (wasm stuff where training data is probably scarce). Claude would ping context7 and mcp-lsp to get details. You do find its limits after a while though and as you push it harder.
      • nico 2 hours ago
        > That's a very simple example/context that I suspect most LLMs will be able to knock out with minimal frustration

        Yes an No. You are right that it's a relatively small project. However, I've had really bad experiences trying to get ChatGPT (any of their models) to write small arm64 assembly programs that can compile and run on apple silicon

    • zackify 6 hours ago
      If it helps anyone else. I downgraded from Claude max to pro for $20 and the usage limits are really good.

      I think they’re trying to compete with Gemini cli and now I’m glad I’m paying less

      • csomar 2 hours ago
        I am on max and burning daily (ccusage) roughly my monthly subscription. It is not clear whether the API is very overpriced or we are getting aggressively subsidized. I can afford $100-200/month but not $3.000. Let's hope this last for a good while as GitHub copilot turned off the tap on unlimited usage very recently.
      • ffsm8 2 hours ago
        you will run through the pro rate limiting within <1h if you do it the way the article lays out.

        But yeah, if you're babysitting a single agent, only applying after reading what it wants to do ... You'll be fine for 3-4 hours before the token limit refreshed after the 5th

        • zxexz 55 minutes ago
          I've heard that if you have several relatively active separate sessions open, the limit is a little less restrictive. Especially if you do a /clear and continue your session on a different project. Honestly, a lot of Claude Code seems vibecoded if you look at the client side, too. Can't tell if I'm surprised that the backend has an element of that, too. Hey, dogfood tastes good - I respect them for that.
        • stpedgwdgfhgdd 56 minutes ago
          Same experience. One terminal window with Pro is okay. Multiple CC running in parallel not.

          We most likely implement a policy that starters in our company can use Pro. Power users need Max.

    • gerdesj 6 hours ago
      Crack on - this is YC!

      Why are you not already a unicorn?

      • lucubratory 6 hours ago
        An LLM wrapper does not have serious revenue potential. Being able to do very impressive things with Claude Code has a pretty strict ceiling on valuation because at any point Anthropic could destroy your business by removing access, incorporating whatever you're doing into their core feature set, etc.
        • petesergeant 5 hours ago
          Having worked with some serious pieces of enterprise software, I don't think this is right. Anthropic is not going to perfect multi-vendor integrations, spin up a support team, and solution architect your problems for you. Enterprise software gets into the walls, and can be very hard to displace once deployed. If you build an LLM-wrapper resume parser, once you've got it into your client's workflows, they're going to find it hard to unembed it to replace it with raw Anthropic.
          • ffsm8 2 hours ago
            But if you did become a unicorn, It would suddenly become very easy to replace for anthropic, because they're the ones actually providing the sauce and can just replicate your efforts. So your window of opportunity is to be too small for anthropic to notice and get interested. That can't be called unicorn

            That was the point he was making, at least that's how I understood it

  • webprofusion 4 hours ago
    The basic idea is that you can continuously document what your system should do (high level and detailed features), how it should prove it has done that, optionally how you want it to do it (architecture and code style etc).

    The multi-model AI part is just the (current) tool to help avoid bias and make fine tuned selections for certain parts of the task.

    Eventually large complex systems will be built and re-built from a set of requirements and software will finally match the stated requirements. The only "legacy code" will be legacy requirements specifications. Fix your requirements, not the generated code.

  • photon_garden 9 hours ago
    It’s hard to evaluate setups like this without knowing how the resulting code is being used.

    Standalone vibe coded apps for personal use? Pretty easy to believe.

    Writing high quality code in a complex production system? Much harder to believe.

    • 9cb14c1ec0 6 hours ago
      Exactly. I use claude code as a major speedup in coding, but I stay in the loop on every code change to make sure it is creating an optimal system. The few times that I've just let it run have resulted in bugs that customers had to deal with.
      • stpedgwdgfhgdd 48 minutes ago
        I noticed that i hardly look anymore at the generated Go code… I do give a lot of attention to the tests. I let CC write some failing tests, implement. Let it run against some real scenarios. Find bugs, let it write more tests, fix. And iterate.

        Writing this I realise, i should more clearly separate the functional tests from the implementation oriented unit tests.

      • Aeolun 3 hours ago
        I think you can probably get a pretty decent thing going if you have models review output they haven’t written themselves (not still in context anyway)
    • kasey_junk 7 hours ago
      I don’t really understand this article or the workflow it’s describing as it’s kind of vague.

      But I use multiple agents talking to each other, async agents, git work trees etc on complex production systems as my day to day workflow. I wouldn’t say I go so far as to never change the outputs but I certainly view it as signal when I don’t get the outputs I want that I need to work on my workflow.

  • marviel 7 hours ago
    Thanks for the writeup!

    I talked about a similar, but slightly simpler workflow in my post on "Vibe Specs".

    https://lukebechtel.com/blog/vibe-speccing

    I use these rules in all my codebases now. They essentially cause the AI to do two things differently:

    (1) ask me questions first (2) Create a `spec.md` doc, before writing any code.

    Seems not too dissimilar from yours, but I limit it to a single LLM

    • rolha-capoeira 5 hours ago
      I guess a lot of us are trying this (naturally) as solo devs, where we can take an engineering-first mindset and build a machine or factory that spits out gizmos. I haven't gotten to the finish line, mostly because for me, the holy grail is code confidence via e2e tests that the agent generated (separately, not alongside the implementation).
      • marviel 5 hours ago
        Totally. Yeah I think your approach is a solid take!
  • geekymartian 6 hours ago
    ADHD coding, brute forcing product generation until you get it right? Just freaking write the code that you can expand and modify in the future instead of increasing your carbon footprint.
    • cube00 6 hours ago
      The end goal is to remove the developer from this equation.

      Business owner asks for a new CRUD app and there it is in production.

      Of course it's full of full of bugs, slow as syrup, saves to a public unauthed database but that's none of my business *gulps scalding hot tea*

      • 6510 2 hours ago
        You have users fill out bug reports then throw some buckets of money at it.

        You could even add a magic button for when things don't work that reruns the same prompt and possibly get better results.

        A slot machine animation while waiting would be cool.

        • danielbln 43 minutes ago
          It's like a salt mine in here. Go ahead and hand weave your copper cable code while the world moves on and accelerates. Will there be slop along the way? Oh hell yes.

          The Model T car was notorious for blowing out tires left and right, to the point that a carriage might have been less hassle at times. Yet here we are.

  • steveklabnik 9 hours ago
    I'd love to see more specifics here, that is, how Claude and o3 talk to each other, an example session, etc.
    • schmookeeg 8 hours ago
      I use Zen MCP and OpenRouter. Every once in awhile, my instance of claude code will "phone a friend" and use Gemini for a code review. Often unprompted, sometimes me asking for "analysis" or "ultrathink" about a thorny feature when I doubt the proposed implementation will work out or cause footguns.

      It's wild to see in action when it's unprompted.

      For planning, I usually do a trip out to Gemini to check our work, offer ideas, research, and ratings of completeness. The iterations seem to be helpful, at least to me.

      Everyone in these sorta threads asks for "proofs" and I don't really know what to offer. It's like 4 cents for a second opinion on what claude's planning has cooked up, and the detailed response has been interesting.

      I loaded 10 bucks onto OpenRouter last month and I think I've pulled it down by like 50 cents. Meanwhile I'm on Claude Max @ $200/mo and GPT Plus for another $20. The OpenRouter stuff seems like less than couch change.

      $0.02 :D

      • Uehreka 4 hours ago
        > Everyone in these sorta threads asks for "proofs" and I don't really know what to offer

        I’ve tried building these kinds of multi agent systems a couple times, and I’ve found that there’s a razor thin edge between a nice “humming along” system I feel good about and a “car won’t start” system where the first LLM refuses to properly output JSON and then the rest of them start reading each others <think> thoughts.

        The difference seems to often come down to:

        - Which LLM wrappers are you using? Are they using/exposing features like MCP, tools and chain-of-thought correctly for the particular models you’re using?

        - What are your prompts? What are the 5 bullet points with capital letters that need to be in there to keep things in line? Is there a trick to getting certain LLMs to actually use the available MCP tools?

        - Which particular LLM versions are you using? I’ve heard people say that Claude Sonnet 4 is actually better than Claude Opus 4 sometimes, so it’s not always an intuitive “pick the best model” kind of thing.

        - Is your system capable of “humming along” for hours or is this a thing where you’re doing a ton of copy-paste between interfaces? If it’s the latter then hey, whatever works for you works for you. But a lot of people see the former as a difficult-to-attain Holy Grail, so if you’ve figured out the exact mixture of prompts/tools that makes that happen people are gonna want to know the details.

        The overall wisdom in the post about inputs mattering more than outputs etc is totally spot on, and anyone who hasn’t figured that out yet should master that before getting into these weeds. But for those of us who are on that level, we’d love to know more about exactly what you’re getting out of this and how you’re doing it.

        (And thanks for the details you’ve provided so far! I’ll have to check out Zen MCP)

      • steveklabnik 7 hours ago
        It’s not about proof: it’s that at this point I’m a fairly heavy Claude Code user and I’d like to up my game, but I’m also not so up on many of these details that I can just figure out how to give this a try just from the description of it. I’m already doing plan-up-front workflows with just Claude, but haven’t figured out some of this more advanced stuff.

        I have two MCPs installed (playwright and context7) but it never seems like Claude decides to reach for them on its own.

        I definitely appreciate why you’re not posting code, as you said in another comment.

        • Aeolun 3 hours ago
          > I have two MCPs installed (playwright and context7) but it never seems like Claude decides to reach for them on its own.

          Not even when you add ‘memories’ that tell it to always use those tools in certain situations?

          My admonitions to always run repomix at the start of coding, and always run the build command before crying victory seem to be followed pretty well anyway.

          • manmal 1 hour ago
            What do you tell Claude to do with repomix? Get an overview into the context?
          • steveklabnik 2 hours ago
            I have not done that, maybe that's the missing bit. Thanks!
      • conradev 7 hours ago
        proof -> show the code if you can!

        Then engineers can judge for themselves

        • schmookeeg 7 hours ago
          Yeahhhhhh I've been to enough code reviews / PR reviews to know this will result in 100 opinions about what color the drapes should be and what a catastrophe we've vibe coded for ourselves. If I shoot something to GH I'll highlight it for others, but nothing yet. I can appreciate this makes me look like I'm shilling.

          It makes usable code for my projects. It often gets into the weeds and makes weird tesseracts of nonsense that I need to discover, tear down, and re-prompt it to not do that again.

          It's cheap or free to try. It saves me time, particularly in languages I am not used to daily driving. Funnily enough, I get madder when I have it write ts/py/sql code since I'm most conversant in those, but for fringe stuff that I find tedious like AWS config and tests -- it mostly just works.

          Will it rot my brain? Maybe? If this thing turns me from an engineer to a PM, well, I'll have nobody to blame but myself as I irritate other engineers and demand they fibonacci-size underdefined jira tix. :D

          I think there's going to be a lot of momentum in this direction in the coming year. I'm fortunate that my clients embrace this stuff and we all look for the same hallucinations in the codebase and shut them down and laugh together, but I worry that I'm not exactly justifying my rate by being an LLM babysitter.

    • breckenedge 9 hours ago
      I presume via Goose via MCP in Claude Code:

      > I also have a local mcp which runs Goose and o3.

      • steveklabnik 9 hours ago
        Ah, I skimmed the docs for Goose but I couldn't figure out exactly what it is that it does, which is a common issue for docs.

        For example: https://block.github.io/goose/docs/category/tutorials/ I just want to see an example workflow before I set this up in CI or build a custom extension to it!

        • breckenedge 8 hours ago
          Classic Steve Klabnik comment.
          • steveklabnik 6 hours ago
            It's true that I deeply care about docs! Turns out they're good for both humans and LLMs :)
          • IncreasePosts 8 hours ago
            An uncommon Aaron Breckenridge comment
    • web3aj 9 hours ago
      [flagged]
  • dkdcio 7 hours ago
    I went down this (and even built a bit of internal web tooling) —- it’s like playing multiple games of online poker for me (instead of the factoria analogy here)

    it’s really promising, but I found focusing on a single task and doing it well is still more efficient for now. excited for where this goes

  • am17an 3 hours ago
    I actually don't understand how you can offload the instruction pointer of the program to another program, permanently. How are you accountable for anything then? You can't debug, you can't program, just a tourist in your own home. Own your code, even if AI wrote it.
  • namuol 3 hours ago
    No real mention of results that aren’t self-referential.

    I guess vibe-coding is on its way to becoming the next 3D printing: Expensive hobby best suited for endless tinkering. What’s today’s vibe coding equivalent of a “benchy”? Todo apps?

    • SchemaLoad 3 hours ago
      3D printing actually is useful though. Basically everyone designing products or any kind of engineering is using it. The only reason it never took off for the average consumer is that every pre designed piece of plastic junk you could ever want to download and print is already available from Amazon.

      In a pre online shopping world 3D printing would be far more useful for the average person. Going forward it looks like it's only really useful for people who can design their own files for actually custom stuff you can't buy.

      • namuol 3 hours ago
        Yeah I’m not saying either aren’t useful, just that they can both be a trap for tinkerers.
  • skybrian 9 hours ago
    > It’s essentially free to fire off a dozen attempts at a task - so I do.

    What sort of subscription plan is that?

    • steveklabnik 9 hours ago
      Claude Code's $200 Max subscription can take a lot of usage. I haven't done a dozen things at once, but I have worked on two side projects simultaneously with it before.

      ccusage shows me getting over 10x the value of paying via API tokens this month so far...

      • simonw 7 hours ago
        I had to look that up: https://github.com/ryoppippi/ccusage

          npx ccusage@latest
        
        Outputs a table of your token usage over the last few days, which it reads from the jsonl files that Claude Code leaves tucked away in the ~/.claude/ directory.
        • steveklabnik 7 hours ago
          Don’t sleep on the other options either, the live updates are cool, see where you’re at in the five hour session.
      • Aeolun 3 hours ago
        Given you can nearly run two full code instances with Opus, and Opus is claimed to be 5x more expensive than Sonnet, you can maybe do 10 sonnet instances at the same time?
  • IncreasePosts 9 hours ago
    Okay, what is he actually building with this?

    I have a problem where half the times I see people talking about their AI workflow, I can't tell if they are talking about some kind of dream workflow that they have, or something they're actually using productively

    • ClawsOnPaws 8 hours ago
      I keep coming to the same conclusion, which basically is: if I had an LLM write it for me, I just don't care about it. There are 2 projects out of the maybe 50 or so that are LLM generated, and even for those two I cared enough to make changes myself without an LLM. The rest just sit there because one day I thought huh wouldn't it be neat if, and then realized actually I cared more about having that thought than having the result of that thought. Then you end up fighting with different models and implementation details and then it messes up something and you go back and forth about how you actually want it to work, and somehow this is so much more draining and exhausting than just getting the work done manually with some slight completion help perhaps, maybe a little bit of boilerplate fill-in. And yes, this is after writing extensive design docs, then having some reasoning LLM figure out the tasks that need to be completed, then having some models talk back and forth about what needs to happen and while it's happening, and then I spent a whole lot of money on what exactly? Questionably working software that kinda sorta does what I wanted it to do? If I have a clear idea, or an existing codebase, if I end up guiding it along, agents and stuff are pretty cool I guess. But vibe coding? Maybe I'm in the minority here but as soon as it's a non trivial app, not just a random small script or bespoke app kind of deal, it's not fun, I often don't get the results I actually wanted out of it even if I tried to be as specific as I wanted with my prompting and design docs and example data and all that, it's expensive, code is still messy as heck, and at the end I feel like I just spent a whole lot of time actually literally arguing with my computer. Why would I want to do that?
      • jwpapi 8 hours ago
        I’ve written a full stack monorepo with over 1,000 files alone now. I’ve started with AI doing a lot of the work, but the percentage goes down and down. For me a good codebase is not about how much you’ve written, but about how it’s architectured. I want to have an app that has the best possible user and dev experience meaning its easy to maintain and easy to extend. This is achieved by making code easy to understand, for yourself, for others.

        In my case it’s more like developing a mindset building a framework than to push feature after feature. I would think it’s like that for most companies. You can get an unpolished version of most apps easily, but polishing takes 3-5x the time.

        Lets not talk about development robustness, backend security etc etc. Like AI has just way too many slippages for me in these cases.

        However I would still consider myself a heavy AI user, but I mainly use it to discuss plans,(what google used to be) or to check it if I’ve forgotten anything.

        For most features in my app I’m faster typing it out exactly the way I want it. (with a bit of auto-complete) The whole brain-coordination works better.

        I guess long talk, but you’re not alone trust your instinct. You don’t seem narrow minded.

        • ozten 7 hours ago
          What does the full stack monorepo do?
      • tptacek 6 hours ago
        We just had a story last night about a Python cryptography maintainer using Claude to add formally-verified optimizations to LLVM. I think the ship has sailed on skepticism about whether LLMs are going to produce valuable code; you can follow Simon Willison's blog for more examples.
  • vFunct 8 hours ago
    The issue I'm facing with multiple agents working on separate work trees is that each independent agent tends to have completely different ideas on absolutely every detail, leading to inconsistent user experience.

    For example, an agent working on the dashboard for the Documents portion of my project has a completely different idea from the agent working on the dashboard for the Design portion of my project. The design consistency is not there, not just visually, but architecturally. Database schema and API ideas are inconsistent, for example. Even on the same input things are wildly different. It seems that if it can be different, it will be different.

    You start to update instruction files to get things consistent, but then these end up being thousands of lines on a large project just to get the foundations right, eating into the context window.

    I think ultimately we might need smaller language models trained on certain rules & schemas only, instead of on the universe of ideas that a prompt could result in. Small language models are likely the correct path.

    • Swizec 8 hours ago
      > each independent agent tends to have completely different ideas on absolutely every detail, leading to inconsistent user experience

      > The design consistency is not there, not just visually, but architecturally.

      Seniors always gonna have to senior. Doesn't matter if the coders are AI or humans. You have to make sure you provide enough structures for the agents to move in roughly the same direction while allowing enough flexibility that you're not better off just writing the code.

    • pjm331 7 hours ago
      I’ve had success with building the first version of a thing mostly by hand and then telling Claude code to look at it as an example of how to do things when building the next N of them
      • swader999 5 hours ago
        The things that work on a regular dev team translate well to the agentic mode.
  • guicen 4 hours ago
    This "AI factory for everyone" model may be able to break resource inequality and allow people from more places to participate in truly valuable entrepreneurship.
  • nico 2 hours ago
    > If you know Factorio you know it’s all about building a factory that can produce itself

    This is a very interesting concept

    Could this be extended to the point of an LLM producing/improving itself?

    If not, what are the current limitations to get to that point?

  • petesergeant 5 hours ago
    > I keep several claude code windows open, each on its own git-worktree.

    Can someone convince me they're doing their due-diligence on this code if they're using this approach? I am smart and I am experienced, and I have trouble keeping on top of the changes and subtle bugs being created by one Claude Code.

  • solomonb 8 hours ago
    > When something goes wrong, I don’t hand-patch the generated code. I don’t argue with claude. Instead, I adjust the plan, the prompts, or the agent mix so the next run is correct by construction.

    I don't think "correct by construction" means what OP thinks it means.

    • btbuildem 8 hours ago
      Also, aren't they just rolling the dice here? Can you turn down the temperature via Claude Code?
  • apwell23 6 hours ago
    ppl are getting slowly disillusioned with vibe coding.

    yes AI assisted workflow might be here to stay but it won't be the magical put programmers out of job thing.

    And this the best product market fit for LLMs. I imagine it will be even worse in other domains.

    • azan_ 6 hours ago
      Are they though? I’m seeing more and more people that used gpt4 and got substandard results get blown away with Claude code and opus once they gave it a chance. Also remember that progress has not stopped (whether it has slowed down is also controversial), so I wouldn’t make strong assumptions that ai won’t replace many devs. I hope it won’t, I really like intellectual work associated with it.
    • petesergeant 5 hours ago
      > ppl are getting slowly disillusioned with vibe coding.

      This is the absolute polar opposite from my experience. I'm in a large non-tech community with a coders channel, and every day we get a few more Claude Code converts. I would say that vibe-coding is moving into the main-stream with experienced, professional developers who were deeply skeptical a few months ago. It's no longer fancy auto-complete: I have myself seen the magic of wishing a (low importance) front-end app into existence from scratch in an hour or so that would have taken me an order of magnitude more time beforehand.

  • c4pt0r 6 hours ago
    Maybe a bit off-topic, but the minimalist style of the blog looks really cool.
  • gerdesj 6 hours ago
    "Here’s the secret sauce: iterate the inputs":

    No it isn't. There are no short cuts to ... anything. You expend a lot of input for a lot of output and I'm not too sure you understand why.

    "Example: an agent once wrote code ..." - not exactly world beating.

    If you believe this will take over the world, then go full on startup. YC is your oyster.

    I've run my own firm for 25 years. Nothing exciting and certainly not YC excitable.

    You wont with this.

    • tranchebald 5 hours ago
      You come across as a massive hater. Maybe it’s a cultural thing. Do you actually have employees?