Nobody is reviewing your pull requests.
AI made code cheap to write, and review the bottleneck.
I re-imagined codebases as cities, where pending changes are activity, and contributors are the inhabitants. (see it below on openclaw's repo)
Nobody is reviewing your pull requests.
AI made code cheap to write, and review the bottleneck.
I re-imagined codebases as cities, where pending changes are activity, and contributors are the inhabitants. (see it below on openclaw's repo)
Good question, I think a potential goal for your site would be to get repeat visitors and longer session.
If I could see other users driving/flying/boating around it might make me want to spend longer time in a session, exploring.
Right now most data seem static, I could be wrong, it would be far more valuable to see live trends related to each neighborhood.
Nobody is reviewing your pull requests.
AI made code cheap to write, and review the bottleneck.
I re-imagined codebases as cities, where pending changes are activity, and contributors are the inhabitants. (see it below on openclaw's repo)
@RyanSael This is incredible. You gamified it really well and made it very pleasant to use. I love how the music blends in so well, makes it feel like a theme park.
Easy to try via `npx repo-city-cli <org>/<repo>`
If you're already in your repo directory: `npx repo-city-cli .`
It's intentionally open sourced so you can ask your favorite coding agent to check its legitimacy.
The generated report html shows you:
1. High level overview
2. Standard city view (addition/removals and branches highlights)
3. Contributors view (where each contributor is touching code)
4. Timeline view (where most recent changes are awaiting review)
5. Detailed breakdown
Opus 4.8's design looks flimsy, with insufficient structural support at the top and middle, an unfeasible build, and symmetry issues.
Check them both at https://t.co/6E1aOBNvul
Sure, benchmarking is great… but bench-making is where Fable 5 shines.
Fable 5’s amphitheater bench seems more reliable than Opus 4.8’s.
What do you think? (blueprints below)
Everyone is vibe coding. I tried vibe-woodworking.
I asked ChatGPT for IKEA-like bench plans, bought some 2x4s, and built it over a weekend.
It actually turned out great. Smells like pine too.
This was too fun not to share, so I built SlopAndLumber for you to try it too. ↓
Everyone is vibe coding. I tried vibe-woodworking.
I asked ChatGPT for IKEA-like bench plans, bought some 2x4s, and built it over a weekend.
It actually turned out great. Smells like pine too.
This was too fun not to share, so I built SlopAndLumber for you to try it too. ↓
Thanks! I created schema for 2x4 based structures, and authored a simple skill which guides an agent how to generate a valid model.
Part of the agentic process includes iteratively hitting a /blueprint endpoint which returns a visual wireframe result from any angle requested, this allows the agent to identify and resolve design bugs, until completion.
@DorOz11 Great call. It probably wouldn’t last outdoors without a sealer. I’m not even sure how well it will in Florida’s humid weather.
I used some simple sealer but might need to redo it soon.
I built https://t.co/6E1aOBNvul to make this experience easily accessible for others.
Whether you're a tinkerer, a parent who wants to try AI off-screen with the kids, or just someone who wants to build their own furniture.
I'll share the technical details in a follow-up post.