I interesting little codex prompt leak just now: “Binary check: Could hidden user memory that is not visible here materially change what I should recommend? No.”
AI tool / best-practice adoption is so different in a corporate setting versus solo development. On my own, I can scrap any skills, plugins, tooling etc. that I no longer find useful. In a corporate setting, how do you tell a team lead it’s time to scrap the setup they pitched to everyone? If I do, how do they react?
I've been an engineering team lead for 10 engineers. While exploring new roles, I'd often come across engineering manager positions but never applied to any, as diluting my role to only the “people management” aspect seemed untenable at best and redundant at worst.
@martindonadieu@levelsio Cool idea. Would be tricky to map the transaction to the specific hotel. Merchant descriptions don’t always align with the business’s name.
@clairevo People are also underestimating the extent to which employees are capturing productivity gains from AI for themselves, via a more relaxed work day. Companies would see more of the gain if they were more broadly willing to pay for it.
@levelsio Seems specific to fashion? Luxury cars still send a strong positive signal. Assuming you trust the person actually owns them and isn’t renting to flex online.
@NoSleep150@levelsio What is it you really think this will do? You think I have an agent running with boundless permissions to the X api? Cmon man. Most common bot setups are: webhook received -> LLM api call for response -> api call to x for reply. Where do you think the “delete everything” fits in?