The Mintlify jokes were funny for a minute. Now it’s just turning into dunking on people trying to build something.
Maybe you don’t think the problem is huge that’s fine. But they’re solving a problem for real customers and executing on it.
Make fun of the grindslop. Just leave the founders and employees out of it.
@signulll I agree as well, you have to build the core first before you can build a remote team. The camaraderie isn’t there with a remote first team. Just my opinion.
@thsottiaux@OpenAI I like how I’m able to get more into the planning with Sol, and I was able to utilize the design feature when I ask it to explain my code.
please i'm begging you show me something you built
not another "this is my custom agent setup" post where you pretend you're doing something smarter than vanilla claude code
please
Tried to use @claudeai to scrape my data from a product I’m using and paying for. Was in a back and forth debate about whether I have permission to do this even though I’m clearly the admin on the account. Switched models immediately.
whenever we post any feature
- x already does this, you copied it
- i haven't heard of x
- i look into x, it doesn't do it
can you guys just enjoy the tools you use and stop being so lame with it
@___Harald___@comma_ai Your beef is with Anthropic. Don’t take pop shots at others who use it for brainstorming, coding, and overall being more productive with it. Just aim your shots at Anthropic.
When I moved to SF in 2013, I was making $100K a year. My boyfriend and I found a 1br apartment for $3,800/mo and split it down the middle. As a percentage of my income, I was paying more for rent than the couple profiled here could easily rent a 1br apartment for.
It seems to me that the real issue with the article isn't just that it ignores the root cause of rising prices, which is our systemic failure to build enough housing. It's that the writer chose a bizarrely unsympathetic focal point.
There are plenty of people who genuinely cannot afford to live in San Francisco anymore. The starting salary for a public school teacher here is around $70K. Librarians average about $85K. These are the people who actually keep the city running, who anchor communities, and who are being priced out by the market.
Instead, the piece focuses on tech workers making well over $180K who gave up their housing search because they couldn't find a place under $5,000 a month after three months. Anyone who opens Zillow can see there are hundreds of 1-bedrooms available for less than that right now.
One reason for this framing might be the narrative allure of the "AI boom vs. traditional tech" friction, but it ends up sounding incredibly out of touch. San Francisco has always required trade-offs, and it has always been expensive. But if we are going to talk about the crisis of affordability, we should probably focus on the people who are actually struggling to survive, not those who are just struggling with expectation management.
@mattshumer_ Nothing, I rather use 5.6.
It’s like Fable was picked up from the feds, and now they put Anthropic back in the streets to be an informant.