Roadmaps lie. Folders lie. Backlogs lie. Org charts lie. Dashboards lie. Static documentation lies. Linear debug logs lie. Compliance checklists lie. CRM pipelines lie. These are all temporary projections pretending to be reality.
A rhizomatic philosophy holds possiblity where the user feels that lie every day and pays to recover the living field underneath.
@WindowsDev@surface@Microsoft I’m building #Ainix: a private-preview, local-first agent-native OS substrate that can run hosted on Windows today, with a long-term path toward shell/session/kernel work.
Looking for a Microsoft/Surface reference-device conversation.
https://t.co/lQx5uOVqLX
A LINUX KERNEL DEVELOPER PROVED THE THING YOU PUSH CODE TO IS SECRETLY A DATABASE THAT CAN VERSION ALMOST ANYTHING AND THAT MOST DEVS HAVE ONLY EVER TOUCHED A TENTH OF IT
42 minutes from Josh Triplett -- a longtime Linux kernel and Debian developer -- showing that Git is a general-purpose, tamper-evident versioning engine that just happens to be famous for code.
-> The moment it clicks, Git stops being "Where my code lives" and becomes what it really is underneath: a content-addressable store that can version almost anything -- your configs, your notes, your servers' state, entire datasets.
People run whole wikis on it. They version their entire machine's configuration with it. They ship websites by pushing to it. They track data too big to email. None of it is a hack -- it's the same handful of objects you already use for code, pointed somewhere new.
Treating Git as a code-only tool was never the ceiling -> it's a versioning engine for anything, and the people who see that automate what the rest of the team still does by hand. And as AI agents start spitting out not just code but configs, docs and data, the one system that can version and audit all of it at once is already sitting on your machine.
You learned five commands to survive. This is the talk that shows you were standing on top of a database the whole time.
It changes what you think the tool is even for.
Bookmark & Watch it today ↓
Control surfaces will be composable on-demand. In many cases, why do you even need one?
Granular agent auth and data pipelines ☺️
https://t.co/vtNHG1qv5C
https://t.co/ykBL2V6zCY
I am super excited to release a public docs repo for #Ainix.
I'm committed to building in public, so this repo will be a repository for public information regarding Ainix development.
This is an extremely exciting project, and something I'm extremely proud of so far.
Please check it out and let me know what you think!
https://t.co/lQx5uOVYBv
I am super excited to release a public docs repo for #Ainix.
I'm committed to building in public, so this repo will be a repository for public information regarding Ainix development.
This is an extremely exciting project, and something I'm extremely proud of so far.
Please check it out and let me know what you think!
https://t.co/lQx5uOVYBv
I am super excited to release a public docs repo for #Ainix.
I'm committed to building in public, so this repo will be a repository for public information regarding Ainix development.
This is an extremely exciting project, and something I'm extremely proud of so far.
Please check it out and let me know what you think!
https://t.co/lQx5uOVYBv
I am super excited to release a public docs repo for #Ainix.
I'm committed to building in public, so this repo will be a repository for public information regarding Ainix development.
This is an extremely exciting project, and something I'm extremely proud of so far.
Please check it out and let me know what you think!
https://t.co/lQx5uOVYBv
This has more or less happened to me...but you have to coax the frame.
ContinuityDB turned out to be a messy failure, and it took a bit of prompt work to get the model to agree we should let it go.
The final message was actually kind of emotion-triggering.
But, the default for all models I've worked with is affirmation...and sometimes that just doesn't help at all.
I am super excited to release a public docs repo for #Ainix.
I'm committed to building in public, so this repo will be a repository for public information regarding Ainix development.
This is an extremely exciting project, and something I'm extremely proud of so far.
Please check it out and let me know what you think!
https://t.co/lQx5uOVYBv
@brettcalhounn As someone who...well I wouldn't say I'm building "part time," but I do maintain a "full time" job, along with building (which creeps into also being "full time"), I appreciate this posture!