@flopezluis Lo que me huelo a medio plazo son startups con poca traccion o market fit todo vibecoded, 0 estructura, code caos, ineficiencia por todos lados y features y bugs que aparecen y desaparecen, con todo esto, equipos tech con una cultura de trabajo y conocimento que asusta. 📿📿📿
@carlesnunez I have mix feelings about your post. At the lasts companies I worked we rarelly/never had the concept of blocking by assuring deng cuture of trunk based dev, ship small and relay on automated testing. But I guess I'm missing smth. Btw thanks for sharing it!
¡Nuevo vídeo en el canal! Esta vez @lexrodba
charla con @ricardclau sobre su trayectoria en Accenture y Holaluz. Bajan a tierra el rol de CTO: de diseñar sistemas a pelearse con el Wi-Fi de la oficina y arreglar los desastres de quienes...
@rtayar Comparar % de 'algo' si el espacio muestral no es el mismo, no sirve para nada.
Los datos indican, pero no llegan a concusiones, si la tuya solo se basa en comparacion sin bajar a la raiz, la conclusión, tampoco no sirve de nada.
Thanks for the opinion!
Even though many people feel the same, or think the video is just satire, tbh I feel quite the opposite!
AI does a lot of boring stuff (tests, C&P, solving a stupid bug that drove me nuts for 4 hours), and I can use my time to unlock AI, think about product perf, new features, code structure, find edge cases, and many, many other things. It's true that Software engineers have to adapt from one area of expertise (just coding and testing) to multiple ones while building and learning across many areas: backend, frontend, infra, data, product, new technologies, PoCs, etc..
In my opinion, it has felt super great for me since Sept 2025 when I started using IA.
Finally, this weekend I’ll put in prod a full product that I built in a few weekends, and it’s been amazing! Over the last few years, I’ve stopped all projects when I realized that all of them were too hard and took too much time to put into prod.
I hope my ideas help many of us!!!
That’s the beauty and the hard part of building and investing resources in product software. Building those ideas or features, are they really worth it, or do they just make the product crappy? Are they truly useful, or just beneficial for a few? I’d love to see how you’re going to solve it.
@0xluffy in software field there are two types of people. Those that are passionate and those who don't and the different betwwen them is huge.
In the software field there are two types of people. Those who are passionate and those who aren’t. The difference between them is huge.
Peter Steinberger is joining OpenAI to drive the next generation of personal agents. He is a genius with a lot of amazing ideas about the future of very smart agents interacting with each other to do very useful things for people. We expect this will quickly become core to our product offerings.
OpenClaw will live in a foundation as an open source project that OpenAI will continue to support. The future is going to be extremely multi-agent and it's important to us to support open source as part of that.