@kdy1dev Depends on the project, but you might be able to use a cheap enough model that makes the costs negligible. For example, Gemini 2/3 Flash models are really cost-efficient. Of course there's always a chance of abuse but rate-limiting helps a bit.
If you have trouble with scrolling history in Claude Code in tmux, try with env CLAUDE_CODE_NO_FLICKER=1. The variable is a bit of a misnomer. It changes the whole scrolling implementation to work much better inside tmux.
Would also argue scavs are much weaker compared to free kits in Arc Raiders. You don't go scav to PvP, you do it to loot, and in Arc Raiders looting with free kit makes no sense because of the limited space compared to the loot augment. So I think free kit is in a weird spot because it incentivizes PvP.
@NickADobos Gemini CLI is already rate-limiting programmatic use cases, so it's not outside the realm of possibility that Claude does eventually something similar. I have no idea how Gemini does the detection but it's impairing my use of https://t.co/tUgu1OM5pg
@ashar_builds@Michal_J_@housecor This is not an issue in practice. Agent can understand both sides and resolve appropriately. See for example https://t.co/Ehjn34rXlB
@joodalooped Make a project on GitHub that people start contributing to, you will notice it's cheap indeed. People will send half-working PRs with less trouble than it would take them to write a coherent issue of the thing they are solving.
"it's also very messy (unnecessary utils, duplicated code, random `as` everywhere)"
This is a workflow issue. Code quality is a 100% solved problem. Review your code with other agents (see e.g. consult-llm-mcp) and set up hooks to prevent tractable errors like those `as` assertions.
"The entire argument for zmx instead of something like tmux that has windows, panes, splits, etc. is that job should be handled by your os window manager."
There's never going to be OS-level window manager for Mac that would allow switching between projects with same fluidity as tmux does allow me to switch between sessions.
So what's the best way currently to have an agent interact with browser? There's so many options lately, playwright-cli, agent-browser etc. A potential benefit with CDP at least I see is that you can reuse the existing browser session and don't have to always open an adhoc Chrome session for the agent.
@TheReeveOliver@SearchForRyan Anthropic has two competing interests here. They want Claude Code to be powerful, but at the same time they want you to burn tokens to compel user to upgrade. Anyone who has paid attention has noticed the trend that you're getting less mileage out of the plans. n