Crafting Strife • co-founder • Relentlessly devoted to web standards, seeking to enhance human creativity and to truly unleash the power of the web platform.
@HarryStebbings@nico_laqua This is such an interesting topic because many think that putting in more hours mean getting more work done and being more successful.
The model isn't the bottleneck. The room is. Wrote about why AI prose feels off, why CMSs broke the writing feedback loop, and why fixing it isn't a model problem.
https://t.co/2TRqLawMJc
Two people who deserve more than a hyperlink. Marcus Österberg runs https://t.co/fuNmVJAn4z, benchmarking Swedish sites against open standards for years. Funka run the CommToAct Digital Inclusion Award and do the slow work that actually lifts Swedish web quality.
Last year, one of our clients won a prize for digital inclusion. When the jury called them, they had trouble answering what they had done. They had built a website. https://t.co/BJtM1umQYC
I used agents to write a blog post this morning. The draft was clean, structured, voice-compliant. I killed it because the argument was redundant. No review agent flagged that. Only taste did. https://t.co/mVoG61dyyy
ARC-AGI-3 drops AI scores to below 1%. Not because the puzzles are harder. Because they require something AI still can't do. Humans solve them on first attempt. https://t.co/oGHrH8xuNI
Walmart put 200,000 products inside ChatGPT. Conversion was 3x worse than their website. This feels like it should be an AI story. It is not. It is a pattern story.
My publishing workflow is fully agent-driven. Agents brainstorm, draft, review, publish. My job at each stage: decide if it's worth moving forward. I write less. I think harder.
@tommoor@karrisaarinen@linear I would explore the path to switching from React to native web components, probably LitElement. Also moving components to use more web API:s and hopefully boost performance significantly
Out skiing with my four-year-old today. Watching her fall, get up, fall again, laugh, and then suddenly just... glide.
There's something about teaching your kid a new skill that reminds you how learning actually works. It's not linear. It's messy and frustrating and then one moment it just clicks.
We optimize everything for speed now. Faster onboarding, shorter feedback loops, instant results. But the best learning I've ever seen still looks like a small person falling in the snow and deciding to get back up.
No framework for that. Just patience and showing up.