Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | maphew's commentslogin

On the flicker free console as well as agent agnostic front, also see BatrachianAI's Toad (https://github.com/batrachianai/toad). Maybe you two should/could collaborate.

good callout, I've seen Will McGugan's work on textual and rich before and that really pushed forward the Python+terminal ecosystem in the past five years. I've seen a lot of CLI tools coalesce on the rust and go ecosystems, for various reasons (uv, fzf, helix, just, etc). But I didn't know toad had gone open source now, very excited to check it out!

my ulterior motive: I use some of Nori skills, and also toad, ampcode, codex, kilocode, and... I want to reduce my tool noise. ;-)

our vision with Nori CLI is to smooth the headache of hooking in skills and other customizations into any agent that's running under the hood, which I think is exactly in line with that. I see that Toad is also built on top of the ACP approach, so there's definitely an overlap or possible integration

Ouch. Relative to myself and all those I'm in IRL contact with, I expect all 230 of them are extremely well compensated, so no tears, but also: that sucks, and those 'leaders' are assholes. No decency or professionalism at all.


Ditto. I've spent a few hours with Kilo Code over last few days. It seems to have something solid to work with. Zed feels really nice, but I haven't quite found the entry angle for working with my stuff just yet.


It's published on GitHub under license ELv2 - Elastic License v2. This does not meet the open source definition, so indeed it's not Open Source. ELv2 is an open source sibling though, closer than many other openish licenses: https://www.elastic.co/pricing/faq/licensing

Still, Amphi should not claim to be 'Open Source'.


@ezst I've come across a couple of your comments noting the benefits and shortfalls of the current crop of PKMS. Lots of head nodding going on over here on the "sure you can define your tags/categories/types, but after page/note creation you're on your own for management" theme. That had me jumping with enthusiam towards Trilium, only to see it's gone into maybe-discontinued mode (https://github.com/zadam/trilium/issues/4620). What are your thoughts on it's viability for someone who is not a current user but thinks they might want to be?

(if there's a better place to have this conversation than (ab)using this thread feel free to point the way. Assuming you wish to indulge me at all that is. ;-)


Try reading the article without an adblocker. It's basically one long ad for packing machines and extras. "Build cool thing with cardboard" is to get people in the door.


Using gvim to automatically edit and re-path thousands of ArcView 3 project files across our network shares in the early 2000s was one my "Behold! I am mighty and a god!" highlight moments.

Before that the project was "work with these 25 people and help them open each project and fix the broken paths interactively" (because servers changed).

The script ran at night and everyone's things "just worked" the next morning. It was glorious.

Thanks Bram.


What do you mean? Pinboard is working fine for me.

Mind you I only signed up a few weeks ago so can't speak to reliability over time.


Would be awesome if the menu can be bound to numpad. Press center key to pop-up, then whatever key around that to select and activate.


Upvoted for the 1st sentence.

A primary software at work is $1,500 to $10,000 a seat (depending on extensions) plus 10% annual maintenance. Our department annual fee is ~$70,000. I have a long list of "vote up this enhancement request or bug to get it fixed" that goes back almost two decades. (It's hard to identify the oldest because the vendor has switched tracking platforms twice.)


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: