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I like how snappy Ghostty is. I do not like how it starts lagging after a few alt-tabs to Chrome and back on Linux.


Using self-hosted Mox for transactional emails.


Guided by the last generation of people with the know-how.


> That is irrelevant.

Why?


That commenter is try is trying to imply that AI agents are a form of crutch. Like if you are bad at programming you use an AI agent to program for you. In reality programmers of all skill levels are migrating to using AI agents for programming.


Just because a high skilled programmer can use an LLM with some effectiveness doesnt mean someone with less skills will be able to match their ability. You LLM-kiddies are worse than nft people in 2021 claiming they're making art.

I really cant wait until the inference providers 5x their prices and you guys realize you're completely incompetent and that you've tied your competency 1:1 to the quality and quantity of tokens you can afford. You're going to be a character from the movie idiocracy.

Of course you'll still be coping by claiming you're so productive using some budget kimi 2.5 endpoint that consumes all your personal data and trains on your inputs.


My motivation for learning how to use agents has nothing to do with my ability. In fact I didn't think LLMs provided value for a very long time - the work I do tends to be embedded in nature ad LLMs were really bad at generating useful code.

Opus 4.5 changed that and like every programming tool I've used in the past, I decided to sit seriously with it and try and learn how to use it. If coding agents turn out to be a bust, then oh well, it goes into the graveyard of shit I've learned that has gone nowhere (Angular, Coffeescript, various NoSQL databases, various "big data" frameworks). Even now one of my favorite languages is Rust, but I really took the plunge into the language before async/await and people also called it overhyped.

If coding agents are real, I don't want to be struggling to learn how to use them while everyone else is being 10x more productive. There's no downside to learning how to use them for me. I've invested my time in many hyped software frameworks, some good and some bad.


>with some effectiveness doesnt mean someone with less skills will be able to match their ability

I never said they would.

>Of course you'll still be coping by claiming you're so productive using some budget kimi 2.5 endpoint

I would. I already run my persistent agent on Kimi 2.5 and use Kimi CLI.


okay llm-kiddie, you're doing magic tricks on yourself like a toddler who's entertained by the sound the Velcro on their shoes makes. Have fun frying your brain and lighting money on fire.


They support Passkeys. This is exactly how I continue using them after moving away from Google Workspaces.


Oh wow, I had totally missed this[0]! Is it possible to migrate an existing SSO account (with associated tailnet) to a passkey one?

[0]: https://tailscale.com/blog/passkeys


It is a nice post. A point of improvement would be to name fields idiomatically. Author should run a few Go linters.


As an asset who successfully infiltrated a rival country's tech company you want deniability. Bringing your own IDE does not look suspicious.


I suggest pushing washing machine metrics to Prometheus, it just asks for it.


I'd say laundry is more Sisyphean than Promethean in my experience.


One must imagine the washing machine user happy.


I am using Beanstalkd, it is small and fast and you just apt-get it on Debian.

However, I have noticed that oftentimes devs are using queues where Workflow Engines would be a better fit.

If your message processing time is in tens of seconds – talk to your local Workflow Engine professional (:


In that case, any suggestions if the answer was looking for workflow engines? Ideally something that will work for no-person-in-the-middle workloads in the tens of seconds range as well as person-making-a-decision workflows that can live for anywhere between minutes and months?


Temporal if you do not want vendor locks.

AWS Step Functions or GCP Workflows if you are on the cloud.


https://github.com/temporalio/temporal/tree/v1.27.2 (MIT)

It has been submitted quite a few times but I don't readily see any experiences (pro or con) https://news.ycombinator.com/from?site=github.com/temporalio


A classic. Not something I personally use these days, but I think just as a piece of software it is an eternally good example of something simple, powerful, well-engineered, pleasant to use, and widely-compatible, all at the same time


This is my go-to solution as well. It is great, but utilizes just one CPU core. But if this the problem, then your business is already booming.


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