Everyone tells you to ship fast. Move fast and break things. Get to market before someone else does.
I believed this for a long time. When we were building Murror, speed was everything. We pushed features weekly, sometimes daily. We celebrated every deploy like a small victory.
TL;DR: Anthropic refused to sign a contract with the Pentagon that would have allowed the U.S. military to use all of its models without restrictions. Anthropic insisted on an exception, and brace yourself, that its models cannot be used: 1) for mass surveillance of citizens, 2) for autonomous killing. Now the administration is threatening that if the founder of Anthropic doesn't change his mind by a certain date, they will come after him.
Google, OpenAI, and Musk (Grok) have all signed the contract.
Following Sam Altman's announcement over the past few hours, people have been speaking out massively about cancelling their OpenAI subscriptions and subscribing to Claude.
As usual, Y Combinator came up with segments that are worth investing:
1. Cursor for Product Managers
2. AI-Native Hedge Funds
3. AI-Native Agencies
4. Stablecoin Financial Services
5. AI for Government
6. Modern Metal Mills
7. AI Guidance for Physical Work 8. Large Spatial Models 9. Infra for Government Fraud Hunters 10. Make LLMs Easy to Train
In our recent Ting v2 launch, we talked about giving your calendar your brain so it can make decisions for you. That means moving from reactive proactive full automation.
Thanks @morajabi for the LED code! Now, when you press Capslock, the LED will also toggle on and off.
It's a really brittle implementation right now and can easily de-sync. It assumes that you start muted and then, when you press Caps Lock, you un-mute. To switch the toggle, simply double tap Caps Lock.
I could imagine building out a series of checks to try and sync up Caps Lock, the Caps Lock LED with mute function. First, I wanted to ship a really simple version to see what it feels like. Try out the new app and let me know if the LED is an improvement!
To work more efficiently and productively, we usually create some familiar patterns (habits) that shorten our time doing tasks (saving time and energy). This is also indirectly related to tools that make the work process easier.
What does your workday look like + tech tools without which you would not be productive?
I m opening this thread because I saw that you re planning to add more providers, and I wanted to recommend Pollinations.AI.
Pollinations is a solid multi-model AI provider that gives new users 1 free pollen at signup (1 pollen = $1), which is enough to experiment with several models.
There s a lot of discussion on X and other places about the future of software development. As with many things in life, the reality is both complex and in the middle of the extreme viewpoints. What we re seeing at Tonkotsu:
Agents are fast and powerful, but make mistakes. They can t operate unsupervised. We think they re like unreliable compilers.
That means developers are as critical as ever, but their role shifts to being managers of coding agents.
This transformation means developers need to be focused on planning and verification, while delegating coding. The role has become barbell-shaped, and the industry needs new tools and workflows to accommodate this.
I m curious how people here think about a calmer, signal-first feed in practice.
If you ve tried Trace already: What felt immediately useful? What felt missing or confusing? What would make it something you d actually open every day?
If you haven t tried it: What would you need to see before giving a feed like this a real shot? What would make you bounce?
I m early and still shaping this, so honest feedback (good or bad) is genuinely helpful.
We're blown away by the support, engagement, and thoughtful questions from this community. Hitting #1 and getting featured in the PH Daily newsletter to 1M+ subscribers - none of that happens without you.
We've read every comment and wanted to highlight some of the feedback that's shaping our roadmap: