Error!
Unable to generate download right now.
We can't find the internet
Attempting to reconnect
Something went wrong!
Hang in there while we get back on track
🔥 TOP SIGNAL
Simon Willison dropped a high-leverage pattern for agent-heavy codebases: have the coding agent generate interactive/animated explanations of how code works to pay down “cognitive debt” (the “black box” feeling you get when agent-written internals stop being intuitively understandable) . His concrete loop: generate a linear walkthrough, then reuse that walkthrough as context to ask for an animation—ending in a playable demo you can inspect and tweak .
🛠️ TOOLS & MODELS
Claude Code — Remote Control now for Pro:
/remote-controlis now available to all Pro users. The intent: start sessions locally in terminal and continue from your phone without breaking flow .Model routing in a real tmux setup (DHH)
- Layout: OpenCode + Kimi K2.5 (via Fireworks AI) on top, Claude Code (danger mode) on bottom .
- Personal router: start “almost all agent tasks” with Kimi for speed, then ask Claude for second opinion / harder work .
-
Omarchy 3.4 launcher:
tdl c cx(Tmux Developer Layout + OpenCode + Claude Code) .
Codex vs Claude (early practitioner signal)
- Uncle Bob Martin: “Codex is definitely faster and probably smarter than Claude” (initial use) .
- Tibo Sottiaux: “Codex is now starting to be associated to speed” .
Verification-first framing (Addy Osmani): argues the “unsolved problem isn’t generation but verification,” making engineering judgment the highest-leverage skill . Also frames the next step as moving from writing code to orchestrating systems that write code (“building the factory”) .
💡 WORKFLOWS & TRICKS
Turn walkthroughs into animations (Willison’s loop)
- Have the agent produce a linear walkthrough of an unfamiliar codebase .
- Paste that walkthrough into a new agent session and request an animated explanation of the hard-to-intuit part .
- Use the result as an explorable artifact (his example shows spiral placement + collision checks for each word) .
Prompt formatting that reliably improves agent output: use checklists (ThePrimeagen)
- “Hey review every file and tell me …” → “always sucks” .
- Rewrite as a checklist (e.g., “review every file and gather context” then “tell me about …”) because “llms LOVE checklists” .
Put stable intent above fast-changing implementation (swyx + replies)
- swyx: prompt engineering is evolving toward “Specification Engineering”—encoding intents/goals/principles as agents get more autonomous .
- Reply synthesis: separate what you want (task) from how (models/tools/strategies that keep changing) .
Write-code-is-cheap ⇒ testing/QA becomes the choke point (Theo)
- Theo’s claim: “Lines of code effectively are free now… Tests matter” .
- He describes a feature pipeline where you can now skip from “user problem” straight to code via an agent (e.g., screenshot → Claude Code → fix), destroying the old funnel—but leaving review, testing, and release as the real constraints .
Agent-run “company OS” pattern (Pulsia)
- Product claim: Pulsia is “an AI that builds and runs companies autonomously,” covering product coding, marketing, emails, Meta ads, and competitive research .
- Nightly loop: a “CEO” instance decides which task to do, executes, and emails a morning summary + next plan; users steer via email/dashboard .
- Scale signals: “91k human messages” and users averaging “15 messages per day” .
- Infra note: founder uses Neon because it’s pay-as-you-go and “very agent friendly” for spinning up and killing databases .
👤 PEOPLE TO WATCH
- Simon Willison — keeps turning agent usage into durable patterns, now with “interactive explanations” as an antidote to cognitive debt .
- DHH — valuable for operator-grade setups (tmux + two-agent stack + model routing + exact launcher command) .
- Addy Osmani — consistently sharp about where the work is shifting: verification/judgment and “factory model” orchestration .
- Theo (t3.gg) — one of the clearest (and most polarizing) narrators of the “code is cheap; shipping isn’t” transition .
- Miguel Grinberg — governance/attribution reality check: CPython has commits co-authored by the
claudeGitHub user, implying LLM usage is allowed (explicitly or via lack of prohibition) .
🎬 WATCH & LISTEN
1) Theo (t3.gg) — “lines of code are free; tests matter; the pipeline is destroyed” (≈21:20–25:31)
A crisp articulation of why agent coding compresses everything before code-writing—and why review/QA becomes the bottleneck.
📊 PROJECTS & REPOS
- Interactive explanations (guide chapter) — Willison’s write-up + example-driven pattern : https://simonwillison.net/guides/agentic-engineering-patterns/interactive-explanations/
- Rust wordcloud research repo + artifacts (Willison)
- Code/report: https://github.com/simonw/research/tree/main/rust-wordcloud
- Walkthrough artifact: https://github.com/simonw/research/blob/main/rust-wordcloud/walkthrough.md
- Interactive demo result: https://tools.simonwillison.net/animated-word-cloud
- Factory model (long-form) — Osmani’s write-up : https://addyosmani.com/blog/factory-model/
Editorial take: Today’s through-line: generation is abundant—the winning workflows convert that into shipped value by upgrading specs, explanation artifacts, and verification loops.