POV: me, no sleep, agentic thinking, doing 20 agents, 4 investor calls, chatting with Boardy and shipping directly to production. Buying domains for upcoming projects
Yousuke Yukimatsu didn’t invent this energy… he just put it on camera. Sound on!
When I moved to new york, I found it hard to visualize what commute times actually looked like.
The same dilemma occurs every time you move, or even book a hotel: what's actually accessible in 20 minutes of public transit?
Deployment link below
@vchennai2 I feel you on this. Having that "feel" for the codebase and how everything is connected together actually makes you super fast a solving a bug or adding an new feature.
@mal_shaik Wispr Flow as of this past weekend. Ever since I added it to my workflow my prompts are way more detailed and I get to feel like Iron Man for a little.
I have AI reviewing all my PRs.
One thing I find interesting is that it be going hella in depth for no reason sometimes.
It will try to get everything perfect and if you let it do it's thing it'll go through and pretty much rewrite the whole app it feels like.
Moving fast and breaking things strikes again. Be careful letting AI take the wheel forreal it can cost you big time.
It shot up our consumption due to an infinite re-rendering bug. Imagine this at much larger scale 😬
One of the best things about coding with AI is how it pulls engineers out of the fog of details.
Normally an engineer's brain is juggling everything at once.
Getting every line's syntax perfect. Bugs that haven't been solved. General idea of everything in the app is connected. All of this while support issues are piling up and you got deadlines to meet for new features.
AI lifts a huge portion of that weight of your back.
There’s space in your mind again. Space to think about architecture, strategy, scaling, growth, and actually solving the real problem.