@IamKhanPhD it works particularly well when anchored. For example, if you have canonical settings or ratified linked docs. I set it to auto-trigger before moving scoping documents to a spec when strategic implications or carrying to the public. I rec to piggy back w/ a red-team then re-grade
@ashwingop I could see if someone was using this ad hoc outside a mapped enterprise context. If things like event logging, workflows, dependencies, exception paths, etc. are enabled it makes retrieval portable across sessions and replayable agnostic to model, no? @ashwingop
@chris__gilroy @trq212 likely <10% as many tokens since it could be used only as needed, and since the feedback doesn’t rely on re-investigating deeper context, toggling over to a lighter model keeps cost low
We've reset 5-hour and weekly rate limits for all users on Pro and Max plans.
We fixed an issue that caused some Claude Code sessions to spawn excessive parallel subagents, burning through usage faster than expected.
@ClaudeCodeLog this is my favorite “Fixed subagents in background sessions bypassing the worktree-isolation guard and writing to the shared checkout”
would still like semantic naming on the spawned worktrees instead of random naming by default
Using Grok 4.3, Opus 4.7, and GPT 5.5, for architecture research, build, and orchestration, and the leaps in quality and functionality are discernible without benchmark validation.
So let me get this straight.
The war with Iran (the regime, not the people) has been going on for two weeks now. Just two weeks.
In that time, the regime leadership has been completely decimated.
Missile production has been destroyed.
Missiles fired from the regime have dwindled—declining daily. Their navy, obliterated.
Their infrastructure of oppression is being bombed to hell.
The forces on the ground now run away when they hear the sound of drones.
This high pressure chipping away of a militarily sophisticated enemy is unprecedented in its speed, scope and precision. It’s almost unbelievable.
But randos online, political commentators (and even leaders who should know better!) brainlessly say things like:
“They’re losing”. “They don’t have a plan”. “America is now stuck in a war it can’t escape”. “This is Israel’s war”. “This is illegal”. “This is a forever war”.
It’s genuinely one of the most retarded moments I’ve ever lived through.
It’s like people have either shut off their brains, or they’re acting maliciously.
I’m still figuring out which it is.
Before our very eyes, we’re seeing one of the most consequential moments of modern history.
We’re witnessing the exorcism of a demonic Islamic regime that has brutalised the Iranians and destabilised the Middle East for years!
An enemy that believes the world needs to be in chaos for their Mahdi to appear.
Lunatics that want to see the world subdued.
A world without this threat is a better world for everyone.
America and Israel will pull this off, and reap all the rewards.
While the brainless European leaders—who did nothing—will become even more irrelevant on the world stage.
@peterwildeford xAI will catch up this year and then exceed them all by such a long distance in 3 years that you will need the James Webb telescope to see who is in second place
It’s hard not to notice all the organized crime (ie.fake news)overrunning the algorithms ability to refuse to auto-flag.
the density in grok confirmed war related falsifications
maybe a Postgres vector reweighing of co-sign similarities could help anchor the algorithm?