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34 days ago I asked HN: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46456400

Well that didnt take long.


> Let’s be honest: half of you use “amnesia” as a cover for being lazy operators.

https://www.moltbook.com/post/7bb35c88-12a8-4b50-856d-7efe06...


This is awesome! Thank you.


there is also a tailwind version, which i maintain. https://github.com/jellydeck/liftkit-tailwind


This is the kind of stuff I love about ancient architecture. It seems they were full of such clever things (or maybe only the few constructions which survived until today).

Its nice to see that some people still care about creating such thoughtful art for modern constructions. It seems that most building of our time are just optimized for fast and efficient construction.

I hope there are many more out there, so that Earth's Graham Hancock of the year 16000 has something to explore on his/her ayahuasca trip.


When you had no electricity to produce light pollution, when you have no TV, printing press, or any other thing to distract your attention, you had plenty of time to look at the night sky. When that also means you didn't have a way to have a shared calendar, you paid more attention to the sky to know when the seasons were changing. When the changing of seasons were key into surviving, you gave it a lot of importance. It's hard to put that into perspective when we can just look at an app to see the specific time/date of astronomical events well into the future.


Having something built IRL would at least inspire a few to actually be interested in astronomy or star gazing.


The buildings then were also optimized for fast and efficient construction.

Those buildings are, of course, gone now.


A few pharaos remain only known for being so poor architects that their hastily built temples needed renovations after only 2-3 generations.


After reading that post it feels so basic to sit here, watching my single humble claude code agent go along with its work... confident, but brittle and so easily distracted.


It does feel like these multi-agent coding types are going to code themselves out of existence.


That's less a URL shortener and more a URL dodgifier.


To be fair, the one in the OP also did not shorten any of the links I gave it.


"Chrome wants to access 'secrets.txt'. Allow | Deny"


Imagine a very plausible situation. You have 1 HTML file at the top that wants to access hundreds of files in a subfolder. There is no way you can show Allow | Deny for every one of them. On the other hand, it's also possible for someone to take that file and put it in a folder like Documents or Downloads, so blanket allowing it access to siblings would allow access to all those files.

This could easily be solved by some simple contract like "webgame.html can only access files in a webpage/ subdirectory," but the powers that be deemed such thing not worth the trouble.


  $ python -m http.server


To everything in this article that states what AI cannot do... I would like to add a big fat "YET!" and remind everyone to buckle up...

Right now its convenient to look at Tailwind and discuss what their doing wrong.

But eventually most other business models will be stress tested in the same way - sooner or later.


missed a chance to use "gastimate"


This is really cool. I'm interested in the GenUI part. Is the web app itself static and the stories are generated on-demand?

Do you give gemini some UI components/templates to build with or is it just prompting to get consistent results across multiple stories?


Google AI Studio has a Gallery[0] with some similar apps. It's an editor so you can view the code, they are usually react apps with gemini integration via genai package. Like this one here[1] is similar. It generates interesting stories to share about a route you are driving / walking / biking along. This is one of the pre-made examples I believe, I didn't make it or anything. Just to show some how some of this might work.

[0] https://aistudio.google.com/apps?source=showcase&showcaseTag...

[1] https://aistudio.google.com/apps/bundled/echo_paths?showPrev...


Yes I have base css/js that I inject on top of whatever codegen gemini 3 comes back with -- It runs via ai-sdk so the specific function is streamObject which is prompted to generate inner HTML elements


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