@humalikeai I mean - I think you got wrist-slapped because of the obvious rip-off... but the idea was good? Hopefully you're busy building somethign similar now... we use Viktor and its great, but bloody hell its expensive
@K3ithAI@ihtesham2005 It really is very good. Not perfect - sub agents still stuff up a bit from time to time so we always follow it up with /simplify and then a custom /review that’s tailored to our stuff. But still. Superpowers is massive step up from plan mode.
It's the 1st thing I had Claude build me after I started using it in anger. I love and use it all the time, hardly ever type anymore. Mine of course can insert text anywhere the prompt is, in any app, not just Claude. However with Claude hooks I have Claude speaking back to me as well. This is not as useful as you might think. I’ve experimented with different modes, best one so far is having a summarized version spoken back to me. What I use most often is short phrases (“Permission needed”, “Over to you”, “Input required”. This works reasonably well but also only scales to a handful of concurrent sessions. Of course I had an AFK mode rolled in, which would then Telegram me when I was afk… promptly ripped that out when Claude got remote control native. For the time being I still prefer my hand-rolled voice control over the built-in Claude one though.
@AnthropicAI I am enjoying Claude Code. Really, I am. But when, for the love of all things, good and sweet - Are you going to make Claude remember the last three months of the blood, sweat and tears that we have gone through together?
@htmx_org@commspaceapp Yes! Sadly, like with me, the twitterfu is not strong with the @commspaceapp
Doesn’t mean that htmx is not still the greatest thing since hyperscript.
Hmm, ok maybe it’s the other way around but you get my drift
And just like that Ralph Wiggum is dead
Claude Code can now create its own project tasks and manage itself
This is the next step towards Claude being a 24/7 autonomous agent
Lesson from this: spend more time on the planning phase. Have Claude build as many detailed tasks as it can.
The more time you spend on this, the more time you'll save later having to prompt Claude, because it will just be able to manage itself for hours
In the 1950s, mechanical calculators had no divide-by-zero protection. If you tried it, the machine went crazy- gears spinning, buzzing loudly, racing until someone yanked the plug. It literally couldn’t stop, and could overheat or break. People learned the hard way: never divide by zero!