Improving communication using product thinking and machine learning. Prev @NotivHQ @bugcrowd. Purveyor of bad dad jokes! #peoplefirst

Joined December 2008
134 Photos and videos
Pinned Tweet
Dropped a project today: Discuss CLI No more reviewing agent plans in the terminal. Discuss CLI turns any Markdown file into a browser review surface with PR-style comments — and your coding agent can join, read the exact text, and reply in the margins. github.com/codesoda/discuss-…
2
1
3
173
Everyone is freaking out about @claudeai Fable using up their allowances. You're doing it wrong!
Replying to @Shpigford
The solution is you don't use fable for everything, set a haiku co-ordinator, sonnet/opus for planning/review and fable ONLY for the implementation. The sonnet/opus can review it, then get fable to update implementation if required. Haiku then pushes and creates PR, fixes CI 🏁
40
I kept manually asking my coding agent to verify database state and click through flows after every change. So I built Bugatti.dev. "Submit the signup form and verify the user appears in the database" — that's your test. Your agent runs it, you get pass/fail.
Building a new thing tonight, would love your feedback. Plain-English local QA, powered by your coding agent. Describe the flow in TOML, Bugatti clicks the buttons. github.com/codesoda/bugatti-…
1
1
126
Your coding agent accumulates patterns you never notice. Skillable mines your session transcripts to find repeating workflows and turn them into skills. Works with Claude Code, Codex, OpenCode 9 more. github.com/codesoda/skillabl…
2
111
Currently ralping a new thing AI first bookmarking - What's interesting is not so much in what it is, but how it's coming into fruition. github.com/codesoda/agentmar…
1
2
66
I worked with GPT 5.4 to brainstorm, then codex and I wrote a PRD (see tasks). That was then strategically broken up into detailed specs using my auto-ralph skill, which I reviewed meticulously. Now auto-ralph is [planning, buidling, reviewing] through each spec to build it out.
1
1
85
You know what would be nice, different permission profiles inside a @claudeai project, e.g. I'm in dev profile, so that has a bunch of skills, tools, etc., enabled. I'm in the AWS/DevOps profile, so I enable all the default things for that. But in general, it's locked down.
79
Couldn’t have said this better myself!
You don’t have to raise money in SF, but the investors you seek to work with should have made their money from that ecosystem. Raising is rarely about one round. The network needs to run very deep to keep the flame lit. One round is rarely enough.
200
Ever noticed how funny it can be to build a voice app in an office/coworking environment? People think you’re randomly talking to yourself all day!
2
133
Chris Raethke retweeted
16 Feb 2025
Your product is only as good as how fast a user can say, "Oh, I get it."
14
21
185
14,865
Chris Raethke retweeted
5 Feb 2025
My daily reminder
357
9,803
70,743
10,814,618
I can’t agree with this more. At the highest level your team is the product. Make sure they are equipped in all they need!
If you want your team to be good at going fast… …you must also make them good at cleaning up messes. The hallmark trait of bad leadership is wanting speed and being mad at the messes and inefficiency they experience later.
1
176
Chris Raethke retweeted
Sora by OpenAI is insane. But KWAI just dropped a Sora-like model called KLING, and people are going crazy over it. Here are 10 wild examples you don't want to miss: 1. A Chinese man sits at a table and eats noodles with chopsticks

361
1,651
9,395
6,510,696
Chris Raethke retweeted
29 Mar 2024
yesterday a senior engineering leader inside openai told me that gpt5 has achieved such an unexpected step function gain in reasoning capability that they now believe it will be independently capable of figuring out how to make chatgpt no longer log you out every other day
92
127
3,033
273,385
Chris Raethke retweeted
Knowledge isn't free. You have to pay attention — Richard Feynman
2
1
11
420
🚀 I didn't choose the startup life, the startup life chose me!
3
229
Chris Raethke retweeted
The more precisely you define the problem, the more easily you can find a solution
1
4
294