Yes, I noticed the same thing, and Claude told me that it's going to be deleted.
I will have it improve the skill that is part of our worktree cleanup process to consolidate that memory into the main memory if there's anything useful.
I agree. I like using Claude or Codex in VM on top of the tmux.
Much more flexibility that way. I open a new tmux window for each issue/task big enough to warrant it, issue a prompt to create a worktree and agents and let them go to town. I actually use claude and codex a the same time. I still get observability because of tmux and I can close my laptop and let them cook for a while in yolo mode since the VM is frequently backed up in proxmox pbs.
I am a retired hobbyist but this has been a nice force multiplier without devolving a complete viby mess. I hope these new orchestration tool support this like vs code remote development does. Same for cloud. I want them to support my personal "cloud" instead of laggy github mess.
Yep, I've been doing a lot of Ansible and Terraform automation with agents, and success has been continually updating our learnings, so to speak, capturing them in skills. It really does help in the long run. And it's gotten much smoother. Opus 4.5 was specifically almost like a step change and combined with decent skills, it has been effective in my homelab.
I'm almost a boomer and I agree. THis dichotomy is weird. I am retired EE and I love the ability to just have AI do whatever I want for me. I have it manage a 10 node proxmox cluster in my basement via ansible and terraform. I can finally do stuff I always wanted but had no time. I got sick of editing my kids sports videos for highlights in Davinci Resolve so just asked claude to write a simple app for me and then use all my random video cards in my boxes to render clips in parallel and so on. Tech is finally fun again when I do not have to dedicate days to understand some new framework. It does feel a little like late 1990's computing when everyone was making geocities webpages but those days were more fun. Now with local llms getting strong as well and speaking to my PC instead of typing it feels like SciFi, so yeah, I do not get this hacker news hand wringing about code craft.
Well, it's not really a full-blown app yet. Claude wrote a plugin for MPV. So now when I watch video I just push a button to mark in and out of highlights similar to how it works in DaVinci Resolve. Then I have a command line tool that takes those timestamps in a video file and cuts it up into individual clips and then re-renders those clips and creates a highlight reel. Another command line tool takes three or four large MP4 files that the camera generates and downloads them and combines them in the actual game video on my desktop and also uploads it to my archive and transcodes into a bunch of different formats and uploads to YouTube. And for transcoding, again, it divvies it out to the video cards, which works pretty well. I think I have five or six encoders available so it chunks it up and then reassembles. All in all, it's nothing fancy, but it reduced quite a bit the friction of coming home after games and getting a video up on YouTube for grandparents.
Same demographic, same experience. AI has been incredibly liberating for me. I get all sorts of things done now that before were previosly impossible for all practical purposes. Among other things, it cuts through the noise of all the layers of detail, and allows me to focus on ideas, design, and just getting stuff built asap.
I also don't get all the hand-wringing. AI is an amazing tool. Use it and be happy.
Even less do I get all the cope about it not being effective, or even useless at some level. When I read posts such as that, it feels like a different planet. Just not my experience at all.
I iterate around issues. I have a skill to launch a new tmux window for worktree with Claude in one pane and Codex in another pane with instructions on which issue to work on, Claude has instructions to create a plan, while Codex has instructions to understand the background information necessary for this issue to be worked on. By the time they're both done, then I can feed Claude's plan into Codex, and Codex is ready to analyze it. And then Codex feeds the plan back to Claude, and they kind of ping pong like that a couple times. And after a certain or several iterations, there's enough refinement that things usually work.
Then Claude clears context and executes the plan. Then Codex reviews the commit and it still has all the original context so it knows what we have been planning and what the research was about the infrastructure. And it does a really good job reviewing. And again, then they ping pong back and forth a couple times, and the end product is pretty decent.
Codex's strength is that it really goes in-depth. I usually do this at a high reasoning effort. But Codex has zero EQ or communication skills, so it works really well as a pedantic reviewer. Claude is much more pleasant to interact with. There's just no comparison. That's why I like planning with Claude much more because we can iterate..
I am just a hobbyist though. I do this to run my Ansible/Terraform infrastructure for a good size homelab with 10 hosts. So we actually touch real hardware a lot and there's always some gotchas to deal with. But together, this is a pretty fun way to work. I like automating stuff, so it really scratches that itch.
Exactly! I agree about feeling free to think is important. I am a legal immigrant here on the green card, and I was randomly looking at my iCloud photos, and there were two of them where I was wearing a 2024 elections t-shirt of the losing side. The t-shirt was given to me as a gag gift, and I just had taken a picture of it to show it to the sender for giggles.
Now looking at this old image. I had second thoughts. What if on the border crossing some officer sees a t-shirt and doesn't agree with it? Maybe I should delete the image. And it's not the first time I want to go post something online, but I've stopped myself. What if it comes back and bites me? Even though it might be an innocuous tweet, nothing egregious, but I just don't want to engage. And this is how freedom goes. This feels as bad as it was growing up in the Soviet Union.
You should definitely delete that image, as people have been denied entry or arrested at borders based on their social media history and pictures on their phone.
Wait till you meet engineers other than sw engineers. Not even sure most sw people should be called engineers since there are no real accredited standards.
I specifically trained as EE in physical electronics because other disciplines at the time seemed really rigid.
There's a saying that you don't want optimists building bridges.
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