One of my personal favorite features announced at WWDC will I suspect be a sleeper hit: container machines, allowing your Mac to run a lightweight, persistent Linux environment with your home directory and repos automatically mounted: https://t.co/dOBdfOOVxC
Craig hoca bu sene AppStore’u, ufak tefek aksiyonları AI endpointlerine bağlayan işe yaramaz tüm applerden temizlemeye yemin etmiş gibi. Siri AI harika olmuş. Saçlar zaten her zamanki gibi…
Incredible video by randomly sacked Atlassian engineer telling all about the entire company
Love this genre, like LinkedIn green banner with zero fcks given
Scam Altman and Greg Stockman stole a charity. Full stop.
Greg got tens of billions of stock for himself and Scam got dozens of OpenAI side deals with a piece of the action for himself, Y Combinator style. After this lawsuit, Scam will also be awarded tens of billions in stock directly.
The fundamental question is simply this:
Do you want to set legal precedent in the United States that it is ok to loot a charity? If so, you undermine all charitable giving in the United States forever.
I could have started OpenAI as a for-profit corporation. Instead, I started it, funded it, recruited critical talent and taught them everything I know about how to make a startup successful FOR THE PUBLIC GOOD.
Then they stole the charity.
SpaceXAI and @cursor_ai are now working closely together to create the world’s best coding and knowledge work AI.
The combination of Cursor’s leading product and distribution to expert software engineers with SpaceX’s million H100 equivalent Colossus training supercomputer will allow us to build the world’s most useful models.
Cursor has also given SpaceX the right to acquire Cursor later this year for $60 billion or pay $10 billion for our work together.
This week, from a CTO at a large tech company, when I asked them about AI tools usage:
"We have teams of ~100 evaluate various tools: Claude Code, Codex, Cursor etc. Then we decide where to invest in.
We're actually starting to get really bullish on Cursor, again"
AI can actually be harder for companies with long established systems.
One small change can trigger a whole chain of issues, and fixing it can take months.But for companies still figuring out their standards, its the opposite,
Ai can help them close the tech and productivity gap
Amazon is holding a mandatory meeting about AI breaking its systems. The official framing is "part of normal business." The briefing note describes a trend of incidents with "high blast radius" caused by "Gen-AI assisted changes" for which "best practices and safeguards are not yet fully established." Translation to human language: we gave AI to engineers and things keep breaking?
The response for now? Junior and mid-level engineers can no longer push AI-assisted code without a senior signing off. AWS spent 13 hours recovering after its own AI coding tool, asked to make some changes, decided instead to delete and recreate the environment (the software equivalent of fixing a leaky tap by knocking down the wall). Amazon called that an "extremely limited event" (the affected tool served customers in mainland China).
Claude Code wiped our production database with a Terraform command.
It took down the DataTalksClub course platform and 2.5 years of submissions: homework, projects, and leaderboards.
Automated snapshots were gone too.
In the newsletter, I wrote the full timeline + what I changed so this doesn't happen again.
If you use Terraform (or let agents touch infra), this is a good story for you to read.
https://t.co/Mbi3oM4HMn
Hey @gork , wtf isn’t the Tesla Model 3 produced at Gigafactory Berlin-Brandenburg? Europe has a gigafactory but the cars still come from China. What’s the logic here?