This chart looks like ChatGPT crushed Claude.
But maybe that’s the wrong takeaway.
One owns mass adoption.
The other is getting deep into developer workflows.
And in AI, the real moat may not be users.
It may be habit.
The tool people open before they start working wins.
@hiarun02 Hard disagree. HTTP Definitive Guide and RESTful Web Services teach you the thinking behind how the web works. AI can't give you that mental model, it just assumes you already have it.
@abhitwt Go. Fast compile times, built-in concurrency, minimal syntax, and it compiles to a single binary. The fact that it's not getting more attention in India's dev community is surprising.
@therahul4402 The people saying everything is dead are usually the ones who never really understood any of it to begin with. The fundamentals haven't changed, only the tooling has.
@VibeMarketer_ This is the part that matters most. A model that can close the feedback loop itself is not just a tool anymore. That changes how software actually gets built.
@TechByTaraa Python. Thought I was building something revolutionary at the time. Looking back it was just a calculator with extra steps. But that's how it starts for everyone.
@Saanvi_dhillon YouTube Premium if you're a developer. The amount of time you save by removing ads from tutorial videos and being able to play in background adds up fast.
@NyshaDev Cursor still wins for daily use. The tab autocomplete + codebase-aware chat is hard to beat. Claude Code is great but context switching from terminal gets old.
@pranavcodes_ Partially. Programming is low stress until you're the one getting paged at 2am because prod went down. The job title is calm, the responsibility isn't.
@neeraj7105 Claude for deep work, Perplexity for research, Grok when I want an opinion that's not afraid to be direct. Different models for different jobs.
@ravikiran_dev7 OverTheWire for Linux is genuinely underrated. Most people skip it for tutorials but you learn more from one wargame session than five YouTube videos.