I really feel this. Every implementation so far hasn't felt like it reduced the contextual load involved for dealing with multiple agents. Tmux/Cmux is great, but whoever figures this out will probably make it big.
jadbox 42 minutes ago [-]
VSCode + any LLM plugin solves all the problems for me. Keep it simple.
anon7000 30 minutes ago [-]
That gives you a chatbox tacked onto an IDE, not exactly an agentic command center. Cursor gets close. But it’s hard to work on multiple things at once, or across multiple codebases.
gavmor 36 minutes ago [-]
I should probably try cmux+worktrunk again, but agent-of-empires works pretty good so far.
3 hours ago [-]
dingnuts 36 minutes ago [-]
[dead]
hungryhobbit 25 minutes ago [-]
I don't understand how random thoughts on X are front-page news on Hacker News.
If some tech CEO makes a major announcement on X, it's newsworthy and belongs here. Anything else that's actual news is also fair game ... but all other X posts do not belong here!
mhitza 16 minutes ago [-]
It easily reaches the front-page for people with a following. I don't think many votes are necessary to get to the front page. And when there's some critical insight or leak.
Aside from that I've seen few posts on X that didn't follow the pattern, and were short lived at the top.
petcat 22 minutes ago [-]
> On-Topic: Anything that good hackers would find interesting. That includes more than hacking and startups. If you had to reduce it to a sentence, the answer might be: anything that gratifies one's intellectual curiosity.
You can just downvote anything you don't like and move along.
Rendered at 18:27:21 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time) with Vercel.
If some tech CEO makes a major announcement on X, it's newsworthy and belongs here. Anything else that's actual news is also fair game ... but all other X posts do not belong here!
Aside from that I've seen few posts on X that didn't follow the pattern, and were short lived at the top.
You can just downvote anything you don't like and move along.