Consensus isn't science.
You want proof that sound structure and vowels of a modern scholar differs from that of a traditional scholar?
Or that the foreign accent of the Anglo-Saxon isn't now the used accent in England even when their ancestors had heavy Celtic accents in speaking the German dialects?
Or you want to argue with nature?
@Faizafabz You will understand why the Briton speak English; a germanic language that's not even modernly German vocabulary but filled with latin and french words & grammar.
The technical staff at @URSBHQ spent the whole weekend upgrading their system. They have improved the service and I appreciate.
There's a number of technical issues though.
1/ The docs fail to generate and on inspecting the dev console and network requests, preview service returns an internal server error. Also not all docs are generated.
2/ Validation issue affecting appointment endpoints
The repeated error responses showing your Docfy is either receiving unexpected payload, unhandled exception during rendering or failing to inject some dependency.
It's like the technical staff are trying to register users with new national id on already built validation logic for old IDs as the uncaught exception is deterministic rather than transient. Maybe.
Gotenberg wasn't restarted on deploying?
I call your attention to this. It's sickening for technical users.
@URSBHQ@NIRA_Ug
π¨ A SENIOR ANTHROPIC ENGINEER JUST DROPPED AN 11-PAGE PDF ON LOOP ENGINEERING.
The core shift: stop prompting the agent. Build the system that prompts it.
Inside the autonomous loop:
- Discover β Finds its own work (failing CI, open issues).
- Isolate β Uses separate git worktrees to prevent collisions.
- Verify β A second agent reviews the work. (Never let agents self-grade).
- Persist β Writes to disk, not temporary context windows.
- Schedule β Runs automatically on a timer.
This is a great framework for building more reliable agentic systems
link to the guide below.
Read it, then check out this ace article on Loop Engineering by @akshay_pachaar π