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andresquez commented on     · Posted by u/BelVisgarra
andresquez · 7 days ago
Very basic and repeating AI like replies. That are following a template and have nothing to do with what you ask back.

Ex:

Hiring: Asks for CV

Person: Before I share, I would like to know more information about the job, etc etc

Hiring: Thanks for sharing your CV, would you like to schedule a call here: link.link

Those type of jobs always seem fake to me, the ones that move fast and an actual human is talking to you, are real.

andresquez commented on Agentic Engineering Patterns   simonwillison.net/guides/... · Posted by u/r4um
andresquez · 9 days ago
I see a lot of people complaining that every day there are 100 new frameworks for “agent teams”, prompting styles, workflows, and everyone insists theirs is the best for one reason or another. It reminds me a lot of early software engineering: every team had its own way of doing things, we experimented with tons of methodologies (waterfall, agile, etc.), and over time a few patterns became widely adopted (scrum, PM roles, architects, tickets, rituals). It feels like we’re in that same messy exploration phase right now.

And actually, these tools actually work, , because 99% of people still don’t really know how to prompt agents well and end up doing things like “pls fix this, it’s not working”.

One thing that worked well for us was going back to how a human team would approach it: write a product spec first (expected behavior, constraints, acceptance criteria, etc), use AI to refine that spec, and only then hand it to an opinionated flow of agents that reflect a human team to implement.

andresquez commented on Nobody gets promoted for simplicity   terriblesoftware.org/2026... · Posted by u/aamederen
andresquez · 9 days ago
I think it's simpler than that, you get noticed and then maybe promoted based on what you deliver. The ability of delivering what you were asked to, on time, or even before that.

Adding extra things can always help, specially like in the UI side of things, since higher ups will probably just notice that part.

andresquez commented on Show HN: P0 – Yes, AI can ship complex features into real codebases   bepurple.ai/... · Posted by u/arndt
coscreen · 9 days ago
Worked great for me. Think about integrating the /counselors skill so you can fan out complex questions to multiple hq models across Opus, Gemini, and Codex. We're using it to do extensive design/performance/SEO audits that benefit from multiple smart opinions.
andresquez · 9 days ago
Andres from the P0 team here. I worked on that part, glad it worked well for you.

You can use any skill you’d normally add to Claude Code locally, so /counselors should work as well.

andresquez commented on Haptics: Tactile Feedback for the Mobile Web   haptics.lochie.me/... · Posted by u/andresquez
phillipseamore · 9 days ago
Strangely found it to work in mobile Safari, it uses a workaround by creating checkboxes that have native haptics when toggled and not any actual APIs.
andresquez · 9 days ago
yes, pretty hacky. I bet it was an AI discovery, reading through lots of documentation or files.
andresquez commented on Haptics: Tactile Feedback for the Mobile Web   haptics.lochie.me/... · Posted by u/andresquez
andresquez · 9 days ago
Hi :), found this library for adding haptic feedback to web UI elements.

Seems interesting for mobile PWAs where subtle vibration feedback can improve button interactions.

Has anyone seen good production examples of haptics used on the web? Curious if there are other libraries people prefer for this.

andresquez commented on Anthropic Cowork feature creates 10GB VM bundle on macOS without warning   github.com/anthropics/cla... · Posted by u/mystcb
andresquez · 11 days ago
Way slower, but way better than chat mode. Nothing beats Claude Code CLI imo.
andresquez commented on How to talk to anyone and why you should   theguardian.com/lifeandst... · Posted by u/Looky1173
andresquez · 11 days ago
One of the best pieces of advice I can give, something that has helped me start talking more with strangers, is this:

When I’m speaking to someone in a service role, like a waiter, a cashier, or a salesperson, I remind myself that I’m just one of hundreds of people they interact with that day. To them, I’m simply another brief interaction. So if I say something awkward or if the conversation doesn’t flow perfectly, it’s not a big deal. It’s probably just one small, forgettable moment in a long series of conversations they will have that day.

Thinking about it that way helps me relax and not put so much pressure on myself. At the same time, some of the most meaningful or unexpected opportunities can come from simple conversations with strangers. You never really know what a small interaction might lead to, whether it is a new connection, a new perspective, or even an open door you did not see before.

u/andresquez

KarmaCake day15September 17, 2025
About
Working on P0: https://www.bepurple.ai/ - Ship complex features, autonomously.

andresequez@gmail.com

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