39 pointsby weinzierl2 days ago6 comments
  • Waterluviana day ago
    > "If you're not reading the Claude Code best practices straight from its creator, you're behind as a programmer,"

    The amount of “you are doing it wrong if you don’t get on our bandwagon” rhetoric I see surrounding AI coding has me convinced that this is a bandwagon I don’t want to be on. That level of insecurity is just not for me.

    • valiant55a day ago
      Yeah, and the tooling is changing more quickly than JavaScript and is riddled with security issues. I think the best move right now is at best using AI as a (in)glorified Google / Stack overflow and waiting until the dust settles on tooling.
      • Waterluviana day ago
        And that’s what I use it for. A rubber duck or a quick reference for verifiable questions. Maybe 5 or 6 questions in a typical day.

        I think when I was a beginner programmer it would have been far, far too alluring. But these days the actual coding part doesn’t feel like the hard or time consuming part.

  • sputknick2 days ago
    I appreciate the validation that he doesn't customize it much. I see a lot of people creating really complex agents/workflows that I tried to replicate and always came across to me as more trouble than they are worth. Kinda like 10 years ago when people would create complex workflows for storing their notes.
  • WalterGRa day ago
    This submission came later but is getting more traction, with 81 comments so far: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46470017
  • noworriesnatea day ago
    I think it would be better to have one of each of the main AIs / coding tools running instead of all the same model and tool. That way you can keep tabs on latest developments while doing your work. Also if you use multiple providers / tools, you can take advantage of more free credits that way, because some providers have a few free credits each month.
    • hulitu6 hours ago
      And the best thing: you can ask one AI what it thinks about code generated from the other.
  • tecoholic2 days ago
    He uses 5-10 terminal tabs and 5-10 web tabs of … you got it - Claude Code.

    Ah man! The only situation I can see this working out for me is, it’s a greenfield project and backward compatibility is never a bother in future versions. Even the 5-10? Maybe like 3.

  • tomlockwood2 days ago
    When these companies run out of VC hype money, what's the actual cost of running 10-20 instances of this at all times, going to be?
    • whattheheckheck2 days ago
      And when everyone is hooked on it and ot becomes $2k a month who will pay and who will be locked out.

      Like SAS licenses