Tag
A vague discussion about current technological trends or where we are heading.
Andrej Karpathy praises a company for successfully calling out BS in the tech industry, referencing a group of MTS.
The article highlights how companies are investing heavily in AI for internal products while ignoring static landing pages, the first customer touchpoint, and proposes a conversational, adaptive interface as the solution.
The article discusses the increasing presence of Google's Gemini AI across Workspace apps, drawing parallels to the backlash against Microsoft's Copilot integration, and expresses concern over user fatigue with pervasive AI features.
This article critiques the concept of 'vibecoding,' arguing that while AI has lowered the barrier for writing code (Level 1), it has not addressed the higher-level skills of verification and architectural decisions (Levels 2 and 3), which remain the true gatekeepers of software quality.
Julia Evans shares her perspective on learning to love CSS, explaining that many common frustrations have been addressed and that the complexity of CSS reflects the difficulty of layout problems.
An opinionated developer essay advocates for the Go programming language, emphasizing its straightforward syntax, robust standard library, efficient concurrency model, and single-binary deployment as practical alternatives to overly complex modern technology stacks.
Matt Pocock argues that replacing plans with low-fidelity prototypes leads to better outcomes, countering the trend of detailed specifications in software development.
Silicon Valley investor Chamath says AI agents are erasing programmers’ edge in technical judgment, and the “10× engineer” may soon cease to exist.