Whether you work remotely or on-site, and who you work with, may not be the most important thing. What really matters is how you handle the situation.
Personally, I find myself quite flexible with both on-site and remote work. But as an introvert who isn t very strong at communication, I usually prefer working alone rather than in crowded environments and I tend to be more productive that way.
That said, I also realize that a lack of real human interaction can indirectly affect both the process and the final outcome of work.
Most AI apps eventually hit the same wall. They forget users unless you build a ton of infrastructure first. This means every AI dev eventually will end up building this infra to provide the best user experience needs for their agent and app.
What rolling your own really means:
Vector DBs + embeddings + tuning
Extracting memories from conversations (and resolving conflicts)
Designing user profile schemas and keeping them in sync
Managing long chat history + summarization pipelines
Juggling different formats across OpenAI, Claude, etc.
I m Amar, a solo founder building Client Whisper with the help of AI.
If you ve ever freelanced or run an agency, you know the pain: sending invoices, waiting, chasing, reminding and still getting ghosted. I built Client Whisper to flip the script.
Keep all possibilities open Don't trust AI guessing. Make it verify with actual server, DB, API calls
Read the functions your function calls Don't guess, actually trace the logic. Timing conflicts between functions cause one to get skipped
Search everywhere that function is used It's being called somewhere you didn't expect
Fixed a screen freeze bug that wouldn't go away for days using this method. The culprit was insufficient function call intervals + fit function not executing.https://www.solhun.com/changelog
Hot off the press! OSS AI coding assistant @Kilo Code just announced a $8 Million raise in seed funding.
@scobreit wrote in their blog announcement:
This funding accelerates our roadmap: smarter multi-agent collaboration, enterprise-grade tooling for technical leaders, and a feature set that continues to accelerate the AI flywheel for development teams using Kilo.
This is a recurring topic here and I recently had many related discussions. So, I wanted to share with you three different stories, three different perspectives and approaches for inspiration.
TL,DR: IMHO There's no perfect day to launch. Just launch it.
Building and launching is hard, and sometimes we all miss our target audience. So let s create a small circle of support right here share your product in the comments, and I ll check it out, upvote, and be one of your first supporters.
Here s mine: Retour a simple feedback button for any website.
I'm excited to share that we've shipped new features on the Blimp platform. Blimp V2 has now moved from a simple workflow automation platform to a full AI-native productivity suite. We have a context-aware calendar, an AI email client, a project and task management suite, and real-time Slack-like team communications, and much more. Check out the new updates at https://getblimpy.cloud
FYI, if you have already created an account with Blimp V1, you can just log in.
Don't forget to upvote Blimp to get it into the hands of more folks!
Hey everyone! Some of you supported Email Buttons when it launched (thank you! ). Just wanted to share that I launched my second product today - SEO Copilot. Different space (Chrome extension for SEO analysis), but wanted to let you all know. Appreciate any upvotes if it's relevant to you!
Chinese tech regulators won t let ByteDance use Nvidia s chips in its new data centers. The TikTok owner needs a lot of computing power to keep its 1 billion+ users watching lip-syncing videos. But Nvidia is a U.S. company, and China wants data centers made with homegrown chips. (Reuters)