Co-founder / CEO at https://artisan.build, working our fingers to the bone keeping artisanship at the center of web and mobile application development in the midst of Slopmageddon.
Ed Grosvenor
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Good news. We’ve solved the mystery. His rainbows are his swim trunks. Which we had with us the whole time since we were going to the pool.
They have stars on them.
The next Y2K crisis is bearing down on us, and nobody has a plan to fix it. A significant number of installed gas station signs are not capable of displaying a price over $9.99⁹⁄₁₀, and we don't have the supply or the labor force required to replace them in time.
It took a very long time to get out the door this morning. Teddy refused to get in the stroller without his rainbows. Nobody knows what his rainbows are.
I finally convinced him to leave by promising him that his mom would find them while we’re gone. I’m sure it’ll all work out fine.
Don’t turn off AI attribution in commit messages. Some day you may find yourself getting a $30k estimate to fix what only cost you $600 in tokens to break and you want us to be able to give you the far cheaper option of just rolling back to the commit before Claude joined your team.
I found a kids’ movie in English at the local cinema and told Milo to invite a friend. Upon arrival, the children talked me into a “upgrade” to the same movie in German, without subtitles, in immersive 3D. Apparently the experience includes smell, moving seats, and spraying water.
At $200 a month, it’s costing a little under $10 per work day. If it’s really a revolutionary tool that is 10-Xing your value as a developer, what’s an extra $20 or so per day? Unless it’s not actually doing that, in which case is the $10 you’re already spending worth it?
I’m hearing a lot of wailing and gnashing of teeth over the tighter peak hour limits on the Claude subscription. If you’re not willing to click the button to pay API pricing for your overage during work hours, how valuable is the work that you’re doing with AI?
I’m feeling very good about living car-free in a 15-minute city right about now.
I haven't quite put my finger on the actual order of operations here, but a constant Laravel papercut for me is CSRF tokens on the login page. Session expires. User ends up back at the login page, with an expired token. Login fails. I need to find a way to pay attention to what's actually going on.