building mossnotes.app. before: director of product @figma. been leading product & platform teams for 10 yrs. 🇪🇹 immigrant. stubbornly optimistic. man utd fan
Moss 0.9.0 is out!
This release is a big step toward a simple idea: Moss presents information in the form factor that’s easiest to understand and act on.
Some of my fav features & workflows ↓
Moss 0.9.0 is out!
This release is a big step toward a simple idea: Moss presents information in the form factor that’s easiest to understand and act on.
Some of my fav features & workflows ↓
This was a fun lil experiment, but so far I think I like keeping my design system docs in Moss over other tools.
Easier for me and my agent to update, don't need to start a server just to view them, and changes automatically become prompts for an agent to update my codebase.
Recently released all of the skills the in-app Moss agent uses publicly: github.com/brsbl/moss-skills
So now you can do this more with any agent you like!
What if your coding agent had an integrated markdown editor you both could use?
Complete with interactive features like charts, color picker, a canvas, video embeds, etc.
as someone with astigmatism and night blindness, designing a dark mode has been one of the most frustrating experiences i've put myself through. the irony is not lost on me lol
Recently, I've been using Moss more from the terminal and via coding agents.
I overhauled my design system and used Codex to replace a bunch of manual review & QA. As it worked, it created detailed reports in Moss with screenshots, charts, and embedded HTML. It felt like magic.
Great in theory, but really expensive in practice.
You can have the best of both worlds and just use markdown that embeds HTML.
All the structure, flexibility and interactivity in a format you can edit and comment on without spending tokens.
been offline for what's felt like a month (but been more like a week) and man, it's been extremely nice, but also i'm ngl i'm excited to get back to building