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it isn’t http://ghuntley.com/fracture

forking vscode? simple. extensions not so simple. they are controlled by microsoft. without them you’ll run into continual papercuts as a vendor who has forked vscode.


Essentially this is Ralph as a service - https://ghuntley.com/ralph


This is the 9-month recap of my "The Future Belongs to People Who Do Things" talk.

Inside:

- The problems with AGENTS . md

- The problems with LLM model selectors

- Best practices for LLM context windows

- AI usage mandates at employers

- Employment performance review dynamic changes

- The world's first vibe-coded emoji RPN calculator in COBOL

- The world's first vibe-coded genz compiler (CURSED)

and a final urge to do things, as this is perhaps the last time I deliver this talk. It's been nine months since the invention of tool-calling LLMs, and VC subsidies have already started to disappear.

If people haven't taken action, they're falling behind because it's becoming increasingly cost-prohibitive to undertake personal upskilling.


Well, actually, the funny story is Cursed is actually three different compilers:

1. It was first written in C

2. Then it was rewritten in Rust

3. Finally, it was rewritten in Zig

All part of research, learning how to drive these models and discover their underlying behaviours. I reckon you could get a comparable compiler going in under a month or less for less than $4k USD.


It has completely rewired my brain.


Location: Sydney, Australia

Remote: Yes (last 7 years; globally)

Willing to relocate: No (max 1 week a month out of Australia as required)

Technologies: https://ghuntley.com/

Résumé/CV: https://linkedin.com/in/geoffreyhuntley

Email: [email protected]

A principal software engineer who is known to write and do conference keynotes about AI. Skillset-wise - a weird mix of software engineering, infrastructure, engineering management, and marketing with a security background. My current focus is automating job functions with AI and teaching people how to do it. I'm currently conducting interview loops.


> So it’s better to work on problems that get progressively more complete towards a known objective rather than problems that require exploration.

Yes. The longest I've had a self-directing agent loop running is a cumulative of three months. One goal, one purpose. Every now and then I modify the prompt in the background, and the agent picks up the updated prompt on the next loop.


very interesting!

how's it doing?

are you making progress toward your goal?


And yet, the original post, which has been on the front page of Hacker News for 18 hours, is based on techniques from my blog that you're degrading.


Small suggestion: It might be best to avoid responding to these “trolls” because some of us who appreciate the work you do might be put off by your off-hand attempting-witty responses. It doesn’t really help you and can only hurt you to respond.


Oh, I'm not trolling at all.


Fair


Front-paging Hacker News is no longer something bragworthy, sadly.


Yes, but the cooked thing is you just run more loops with the right prompts and you can resolve defective outcomes. It's terrifying


No, it still doesn't work. But the only way to realise it is to actually really try using it.


Probably the second. I first discovered this around about March. It's kind of hilarious.


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