I was going to write a proper long-form but fuck it, let's just do a thread TENEX is a tool I've been using and building for the past 6 weeks (started the last day of @Sovereign Engineering ) After hearing what sounded like a bunch of cope from a ton of devs ("oh, it's so good that I'm a dev because I can understand how to build with it, so my skillset is tooootally relevant!") I wanted to explore the opposite. Like a keynesian, what if it's not only not relevant, but you gotta unlearn in order to go with the vibe? Here's what it looks like. The interface literally doesn't even show you the code. All vibes. image

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So, what does it do? Every project there is a nostr event (new kind) And every task there is another nostr event (also a new kind) Each project gets its own nsec when you create the event. Agents building on the project publish nostr events constantly as they work (via an mcp tool I built that I will talk about later) Events are just kind 1 with a confidence score and a git commit hash. Why is this cool? A) ... if you have to ask..."you wouldn't get it" B) because that means that absolutely all context is kept on nostr, is addressable, it timestamped and thought processes are preserved AND addressable. So I can fucking reply to any part of the thought process and correct its work. Here comes (one of) the cool parts:
As someone who is not a professional developer, this could not be less appealing. I can't get an AI to write simple English text in a way that feels coherent, not robotic and not generic. If that's what LLMs have to offer for text, I can't imagine that the quality of code (which requires understanding problems at a deep level) would look like.
the axiom's avatar
the axiom 7 months ago
you are the only sane person in this thread
All vibes.
PABLOF7z's avatar PABLOF7z
I was going to write a proper long-form but fuck it, let's just do a thread TENEX is a tool I've been using and building for the past 6 weeks (started the last day of @Sovereign Engineering ) After hearing what sounded like a bunch of cope from a ton of devs ("oh, it's so good that I'm a dev because I can understand how to build with it, so my skillset is tooootally relevant!") I wanted to explore the opposite. Like a keynesian, what if it's not only not relevant, but you gotta unlearn in order to go with the vibe? Here's what it looks like. The interface literally doesn't even show you the code. All vibes. image
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