Next week I'm speaking at @CascadiaJS in Seattle.
I've heard nothing but praise about the conference so definitely drop by if you can!
Use the promo code FILIP to get $100 off.
Feel free to share with your network.
Wasp now supports static prerendering! 🎉
And all it takes is one line: prerender: true
Real HTML at build time. Instant content for users. Visible to every crawler, including AI ones like ChatGPT, Claude, and Perplexity.
Read all about it in the comments 👇
I'm building Open Vibe to solve for this.
It teaches systems knowledge of a SaaS app while you build it, using your agent as a tutor.
So you don't learn to code, but you do learn the domain and the app you've built.
I built a web dev tutor that lives in your Claude Code.
Interactive, and 100% free.
It's like having a super patient senior developer tutor you as you build.
My non-technical teammate is using it to learn to vibe code like a pro and <3's it.
Language development is what initially drove me to Wasp and to start working with Martin and Matija. What made me stay is an incredible team and dedication to deliver the best framework for full-stack web apps.
My brother and I invented a new programming language for web development. It got trending on HackerNews and we raised $5M.
Five years later, I admit it was a mistake. A new, custom language is scary + IDE support is a real PITA.
Here’s the full story and what's coming next:
Launch Week #11, Day 2 Announcement
🔧 Under-the-hood day: How we test Wasp as a fullstack framework
The better our tests, the faster we ship!
✦ Learn about Wasp's unique architecture
✦ Why we approach our tests the same as production code
✦ Courage > 100% coverage
🔗👇
This is why we're building https://t.co/6lGZ3Zxfhv - a new, truly full-stack framework.
Devs want Rails/Laravel experience for JS, but all the attempts so far have failed b/c either the timing was wrong, or the core team gave up (lost motivation, no money).
We've been pushing for almost five years and raised >$5M to have serious folks work FT on it. We're getting there, commit by commit.
Some Emacs fun: I am Community Captain this sprint at @WaspLang , so I wanted to schedule a task for each working day in the next two weeks.
I created one task, ran Emacs command that copies it 14 times with +1d time shift, and voila! I will see a task every day in my org agenda.
@TejasKumar_ I have both.
The Mac experience is much smoother, from hardware to the random UI stuff.
I still prefer Linux. The workflow is more fun (tiling WMs), and I like dealing with the system.
If that's not your thing and you'd rather spend time building, you're not missing much :)