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moribunda commented on How I use Claude Code: Separation of planning and execution   boristane.com/blog/how-i-... · Posted by u/vinhnx
deevus · 22 days ago
I'm using the in-built features as well, but I like the flow that I have with superpowers. You've made a lot of assumptions with your comment that are just not true (at least for me).

I find that brainstorming + (executing plans OR subagent driven development) is way more reliable than the built-in tooling.

moribunda · 21 days ago
I made no assumptions about you - I simply commented on the post replying to your comment which I liked and simply wanted to follow the point of view :)
moribunda commented on How I use Claude Code: Separation of planning and execution   boristane.com/blog/how-i-... · Posted by u/vinhnx
deevus · 22 days ago
This is what I do with the obra/superpowers[0] set of skills.

1. Use brainstorming to come up with the plan using the Socratic method

2. Write a high level design plan to file

3. I review the design plan

4. Write an implementation plan to file. We've already discussed this in detail, so usually it just needs skimming.

5. Use the worktree skill with subagent driven development skill

6. Agent does the work using subagents that for each task:

  a. Implements the task

  b. Spec reviews the completed task

  c. Code reviews the completed task
7. When all tasks complete: create a PR for me to review

8. Go back to the agent with any comments

9. If finished, delete the plan files and merge the PR

[0]: https://github.com/obra/superpowers

moribunda · 22 days ago
The crowd around this pot shows how superficial is knowledge about claude code. It gets releases each day and most of this is already built in the vanilla version. Not to mention subagent working in work trees, memory.md, plan on which you can comment directly from the interface, subagents launched in research phase, but also some basic mcp's like LSP/IDE integration, and context7 to not to be stuck in the knowledge cutoff/past.

When you go to YouTube and search for stuff like "7 levels of claude code" this post would be maybe 3-4.

Oh, one more thing - quality is not consistent, so be ready for 2-3 rounds of "are you happy with the code you wrote" and defining audit skills crafted for your application domain - like for example RODO/Compliance audit etc.

moribunda commented on OpenAI should build Slack   latent.space/p/ainews-why... · Posted by u/swyx
miki123211 · a month ago
Teams is definitely a solid success. It is by no means a good app. Those two things aren't the same.

Slack started with an aggressive "bottom up" approach, they made something actually good and got to worrying about the sales part later. You don't need sales as much when companies come to you, begging you for an actual contract that fulfills their enterprise requirements, knowing that rooting you out is almost impossible.

Teams went the other way, in typical Microsoft style. Microsoft sells it bundled with all the other Microsoft things it sells. Most companies want a Microsoft contract anyway, and have an established sales relationship with MS, so adopting Teams is a lot less compliance, integration and procurement work than adopting anything else. You don't need good UI if your sales strategy isn't predicated on users choosing you for UI.

And then there's Discord, which really isn't a bad work comms app if you're small enough not to need the compliance stuff. It gives you almost everything the big apps do for free, including unlimited calls, an advanced RBAC system, as many channels / messages as you want, a decent bot API (including media streaming), good notification management, multi-server / cross-organization support etc. They're actively disinterested in selling to businesses (which is what makes them so good, the features they paywall are the features needed by gamers, not serious professionals), but that also means you'll need to eventually migrate off of it when compliance requirements set in.

moribunda · a month ago
Slack was a sluggish version of IRC... And somehow the world bought it.
moribunda commented on OpenAI should build Slack   latent.space/p/ainews-why... · Posted by u/swyx
vladvasiliu · a month ago
It's by and large the slowest, jankiest, laggiest software I use regularly. And I say that as someone who swears Adobe has added a bunch of sleeps in Lightroom.

On basic chat: it will sometimes scroll up when I get a new message, while I'm actively participating in that chat, so I need to scroll back down to read the new messages. Occasionally it flickers, for bonus points. It will not mark the chat as read if I'm on it without clicking on a different chat and coming back. It's the only software I use that, for some reason, has an effect on my typing accuracy. Don't even get me started on its handling of copy/paste. I'm also pretty sure there's some joke I just don't get around the search function.

For calls: it refuses to pick the correct microphone, and will sometimes mute it completely somehow (I lose the feedback in the headphones – I have a jabra headset that does this). This will even happen when I hang up a call and start another one right away. Other times it works well. My default mic is always my wired, always connected, headset mic. I don't use BT headsets that switch from music to communications or whatever depending on what I do, which could confuse the available / selected mics.

It drains my laptop's and iphone's battery like no tomorrow, even if I turn off video and only do voice chat, even if nobody has the camera on or shares a screen. Also, on Windows, for some reason it doesn't use the native notifications, but implements its own crappy ones – but this isn't that big of an issue, since I mostly disable them anyway.

All this is happening on both the "heavy" (heh) Windows client, and on chrome on Linux, both running on a fairly beefy new PC with gobs of RAM. Fun fact: the experience was exactly the same on my 5-year-old laptop with a U-series Intel CPU, so I don't think it's a resources problem.

moribunda · a month ago
Also if you are using language with more than 24 letters - like you know, most of the world... You can't do {left alt}+n in teams while {right alt}+n works perfectly fine, and I haven't found a way to disable this awful behavior.

Like mate - I'm on Mac, I use CMD+n for new tabs, not windows-like shortcuts...

moribunda commented on FreeRadical – Rust CMS that's 1500% faster than WordPress   freeradical.dev/... · Posted by u/prabhatkr
moribunda · 3 months ago
If you compare it to wp, where's the migration guide? Feature parity check?
moribunda commented on Semantic Compression (2014)   caseymuratori.com/blog_00... · Posted by u/tosh
moribunda · 3 months ago
Well, one might think it's not hard to predict that you will have to use buttons in the game editor more than once...
moribunda commented on Social anxiety isn't about being liked   chrislakin.blog/p/social-... · Posted by u/rohmanhakim
trogdor · 5 months ago
> after about the fourth interaction, something about me registers as "off" to other people and they start to distance themselves from me. I have never understood why

I’m not sure it would be helpful, but have you tried asking anyone?

moribunda · 5 months ago
I second this suggestion. This might sound obvious but during my therapy my psychologist asked me to do this, but in a non-personal/non-threatening way for the relation. Just by telling them that I'm working through my issues and I'd like to get an honest (best would be written/no-interaction type) feedback - what makes them uncomfortable etc. This helped me a lot - to see how different the transmission was on the receiving end from my intentions.
moribunda commented on I couldn't submit a PR, so I got hired and fixed it myself   skeptrune.com/posts/doing... · Posted by u/skeptrune
392 · 7 months ago
Also accepting gmaps work, if only it could preemptively cache the return trip for any trip longer than an hour, so that I'm not stuck with no service trying to remember how I got there.
moribunda · 7 months ago
Download the map of the area in Google maps.
moribunda commented on Speeding up PostgreSQL dump/restore snapshots   xata.io/blog/behind-the-s... · Posted by u/tudorg
moribunda · 8 months ago
While these optimizations are solid improvements, I was hoping to see more advanced techniques beyond the standard bulk insert and deferred constraint patterns. These are well-established PostgreSQL best practices - would love to see how pgstream handles more complex scenarios like parallel workers with partition-aware loading, or custom compression strategies for specific data types.
moribunda commented on Echo Chamber: A Context-Poisoning Jailbreak That Bypasses LLM Guardrails   neuraltrust.ai/blog/echo-... · Posted by u/Joan_Vendrell
moribunda · 9 months ago
Gemini is jail broken by design ;) this type of attack doesn't work on Claude.

u/moribunda

KarmaCake day67January 14, 2020View Original