Joined November 2008
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When the downdetector is down, because it uses what is down (Cloudflare)
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Good morning Claude - Good morning, Marc -> 2% usage of the 5 hour window gone, lol
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Claude Code for free: How to use Claude Code with any models from @OpenRouter : ANTHROPIC_BASE_URL="openrouter.ai/api" ANTHROPIC_AUTH_TOKEN="$OPEN_ROUTER_API_KEY" ANTHROPIC_API_KEY="" ANTHROPIC_MODEL="stepfun/step-3.5-flash:free" claude Step 3.5 Flash is currently free!
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Is @Gemini meming me? In @antigravity I said: "Don't always ask me to do something - just do it" Gemini:
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Luckily I have a lot of RAM, so it didn't crash and managed to get out of the loop:
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In CET time that means you get double usage from midnight to 13h - productive mornings
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A small thank you to everyone using Claude: We’re doubling usage outside our peak hours for the next two weeks.
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POV your SaaS is working:
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How to become a millionaire: 1) Hand API credits without limits to OpenClaw 2) Let it run wild 3) Be a billionaire before Now you're a millionaire
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Marc Päpper 🦆 retweeted
If your child becomes a reader, about 80% of the educational job is already done. That's our honest assessment, based on many of us working in education for over three decades. Everything else is secondary. Most parents think science education is important. Yes, it is. But if you can't read the biology textbook, you're not going to learn biology. Reading is the meta-skill that enables all other skills. History requires reading. Science requires reading. Even math increasingly requires reading as it becomes more sophisticated. The child who reads voraciously will figure out everything else. The child who doesn't will struggle with everything.
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A team of Claude Opus 4.6 casually wrote a Rust based C compiler which can compile the Linux kernel without any dependencies and internet access. We indeed live in very interesting times!
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What he said, exactly my experience as well, although I was more at 80/20 for 12 months already, probably skill issue on my side.
A few random notes from claude coding quite a bit last few weeks. Coding workflow. Given the latest lift in LLM coding capability, like many others I rapidly went from about 80% manual autocomplete coding and 20% agents in November to 80% agent coding and 20% edits touchups in December. i.e. I really am mostly programming in English now, a bit sheepishly telling the LLM what code to write... in words. It hurts the ego a bit but the power to operate over software in large "code actions" is just too net useful, especially once you adapt to it, configure it, learn to use it, and wrap your head around what it can and cannot do. This is easily the biggest change to my basic coding workflow in ~2 decades of programming and it happened over the course of a few weeks. I'd expect something similar to be happening to well into double digit percent of engineers out there, while the awareness of it in the general population feels well into low single digit percent. IDEs/agent swarms/fallability. Both the "no need for IDE anymore" hype and the "agent swarm" hype is imo too much for right now. The models definitely still make mistakes and if you have any code you actually care about I would watch them like a hawk, in a nice large IDE on the side. The mistakes have changed a lot - they are not simple syntax errors anymore, they are subtle conceptual errors that a slightly sloppy, hasty junior dev might do. The most common category is that the models make wrong assumptions on your behalf and just run along with them without checking. They also don't manage their confusion, they don't seek clarifications, they don't surface inconsistencies, they don't present tradeoffs, they don't push back when they should, and they are still a little too sycophantic. Things get better in plan mode, but there is some need for a lightweight inline plan mode. They also really like to overcomplicate code and APIs, they bloat abstractions, they don't clean up dead code after themselves, etc. They will implement an inefficient, bloated, brittle construction over 1000 lines of code and it's up to you to be like "umm couldn't you just do this instead?" and they will be like "of course!" and immediately cut it down to 100 lines. They still sometimes change/remove comments and code they don't like or don't sufficiently understand as side effects, even if it is orthogonal to the task at hand. All of this happens despite a few simple attempts to fix it via instructions in CLAUDE . md. Despite all these issues, it is still a net huge improvement and it's very difficult to imagine going back to manual coding. TLDR everyone has their developing flow, my current is a small few CC sessions on the left in ghostty windows/tabs and an IDE on the right for viewing the code manual edits. Tenacity. It's so interesting to watch an agent relentlessly work at something. They never get tired, they never get demoralized, they just keep going and trying things where a person would have given up long ago to fight another day. It's a "feel the AGI" moment to watch it struggle with something for a long time just to come out victorious 30 minutes later. You realize that stamina is a core bottleneck to work and that with LLMs in hand it has been dramatically increased. Speedups. It's not clear how to measure the "speedup" of LLM assistance. Certainly I feel net way faster at what I was going to do, but the main effect is that I do a lot more than I was going to do because 1) I can code up all kinds of things that just wouldn't have been worth coding before and 2) I can approach code that I couldn't work on before because of knowledge/skill issue. So certainly it's speedup, but it's possibly a lot more an expansion. Leverage. LLMs are exceptionally good at looping until they meet specific goals and this is where most of the "feel the AGI" magic is to be found. Don't tell it what to do, give it success criteria and watch it go. Get it to write tests first and then pass them. Put it in the loop with a browser MCP. Write the naive algorithm that is very likely correct first, then ask it to optimize it while preserving correctness. Change your approach from imperative to declarative to get the agents looping longer and gain leverage. Fun. I didn't anticipate that with agents programming feels *more* fun because a lot of the fill in the blanks drudgery is removed and what remains is the creative part. I also feel less blocked/stuck (which is not fun) and I experience a lot more courage because there's almost always a way to work hand in hand with it to make some positive progress. I have seen the opposite sentiment from other people too; LLM coding will split up engineers based on those who primarily liked coding and those who primarily liked building. Atrophy. I've already noticed that I am slowly starting to atrophy my ability to write code manually. Generation (writing code) and discrimination (reading code) are different capabilities in the brain. Largely due to all the little mostly syntactic details involved in programming, you can review code just fine even if you struggle to write it. Slopacolypse. I am bracing for 2026 as the year of the slopacolypse across all of github, substack, arxiv, X/instagram, and generally all digital media. We're also going to see a lot more AI hype productivity theater (is that even possible?), on the side of actual, real improvements. Questions. A few of the questions on my mind: - What happens to the "10X engineer" - the ratio of productivity between the mean and the max engineer? It's quite possible that this grows *a lot*. - Armed with LLMs, do generalists increasingly outperform specialists? LLMs are a lot better at fill in the blanks (the micro) than grand strategy (the macro). - What does LLM coding feel like in the future? Is it like playing StarCraft? Playing Factorio? Playing music? - How much of society is bottlenecked by digital knowledge work? TLDR Where does this leave us? LLM agent capabilities (Claude & Codex especially) have crossed some kind of threshold of coherence around December 2025 and caused a phase shift in software engineering and closely related. The intelligence part suddenly feels quite a bit ahead of all the rest of it - integrations (tools, knowledge), the necessity for new organizational workflows, processes, diffusion more generally. 2026 is going to be a high energy year as the industry metabolizes the new capability.
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RT @EoinHiggins_: Doesn’t get much clearer than this

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Without a president with democratic values, democracy is a lie
Without voter ID, democracy is a lie
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United States citizens: it's up to you to stand up and remove the shame of continuing to support this "president"
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Trump will be in the history books as the most foolish president of all times destroying connections to allies that have been built over centuries.
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Summary of the paper: Background: Residual connection is adding a signal difference to the original input y = x f(x), so if f(x) = 0, then the original signal is still there Hyper connections makes multiple streams and has 3 matrices involved to so so (one matrix mixes the streams, one matrix combines the streams before attention - so it's not as expensive and the third decides after attention how to apply the difference to the streams) Y = Mix(x1, x2) Post(f(Pre(x1, x2)) - here two streams x1, x2 Contribution: This paper contributes manifold constraints which means that the Mix matrix always gets normalized so both its rows (prevent single stream to grow unbounded) and columns (prevent total information to grow unbounded) sum to 1. For this normalization the Sinkhorn-Knopp algorithm is used. In addition they write CUDA kernels to make all this computafionally feasible
🚨 BREAKING: DeepSeek just dropped a fundamental improvement in Transformer architecture CEO Wenfeng Liang on the author list THE WHALE IS BACK 🐋
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Here we go again the downdetector is down due to Cloudflare take 2:
When the downdetector is down, because it uses what is down (Cloudflare)
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Marc Päpper 🦆 retweeted
When the downdetector is down, because it uses what is down (Cloudflare)
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