Warp has made available a CLI version of their Agent, with a limited set of operations for now, e.g., listing your MCP servers and interacting with the agent.
It comes bundled with both Warp and Warp Preview, installable using the Command Palette under `Install Warp CLI Command`. Alternatively, it can be installed as a standalone package on macOS and Linux.
Both AirPods Pro 3 and Ear (3) launched this month. I m curious what folks would get? I really like the design of Ear (3) and I can see myself using the Super Mic on the case a lot but . From seeing all the reviews on the AirPods Pro 3 it seems that their quality of sound, ANC, and microphone is better. So might have to pick those as the winner for me. What does everyone else think?
I'm Aloke, Engineer #1 at Warp and lead eng on Warp's new coding features.
We're all in on agentic coding at Warp, but we also recognize that even the best agents need some human guidance. We just launched a suite of new features to help you closely iterate with agents code review panel, file editor, file tree, slash commands, WARP.md (or use your existing agent.md file).
Hi Zack! I m relatively a new Warp user but it was love at first prompt
Warp is the product that I would have wanted to make after using multiple vibe code. The design choice of not focusing on the code l but rather have the UI focused on the outcome is what I think differentiate Wrap for all other tools and IDEs.
Today @OpenAI introduced GPT-5. Their smartest, fastest, and most useful model yet. Touting it as their most advanced model for coding and agentic tasks.
ICYMI: OpenAI posted a cryptic tweet yesterday, announcing a livestream for today at 10am PT. The cryptic part? They swapped the S for a 5 , which, of course, set off a wave of GPT-5 speculation. But this is OpenAI, and at this point, GPT-5 rumors feel like a monthly tradition.
Introduced with the release of Ollama's support for @GPT OSS, is Turbo; Ollama's privacy-first datacenter-grade cloud inference service.
Whilst it's currently in preview, the service costs $20/m, and has both hourly and daily limits. Usage-based pricing will be available soon. So far, the service only has gpt-oss-12b and gpt-oss-120b models, and works with Ollama's App, CLI, and API.
I've been pretty impressed at the amount of products people (including myself) have been able to create which got me curious... do vibe coders or AI-primary builders have a place in a company or team? My thinking is the more technically adept would work on the core-focus while vibecoders can assist with other tasks that shouldn't be the main devs focus...like a potential feature add, minor changes, or even exploring different ways of modifying the existing product. I'm curious what you all think, would you hire a vibe coder?
I've been pretty impressed at the amount of products people (including myself) have been able to create which got me curious... do vibe coders or AI-primary builders have a place in a company or team? My thinking is the more technically adept would work on the core-focus while vibecoders can assist with other tasks that shouldn't be the main devs focus...like a potential feature add, minor changes, or even exploring different ways of modifying the existing product. I'm curious what you all think, would you hire a vibe coder?
Today, Warp is the #1 overall coding agent on benchmarks like Terminal-Bench (20% ahead of Claude Code) and top 5 on SWE-bench Verified (71%). We ve been blown away by the reception post-launch: from press outlets (TechCrunch, Fast Company, New Stack), to product adoption, and real-user feedback.
AI coding tools seem to come in two main flavors: IDE-based, like @Cursor and @GitHub Copilot, and terminal-based setups, like using @Claude Code to generate commands, scripts, or entire files. Both have their fans, but which one actually helps you move faster?
Curious what flow people are sticking with long term, and where you see the most gains (or frustrations).
AI coding tools seem to come in two main flavors: IDE-based, like @Cursor and @GitHub Copilot, and terminal-based setups, like using @Claude Code to generate commands, scripts, or entire files. Both have their fans, but which one actually helps you move faster?
Curious what flow people are sticking with long term, and where you see the most gains (or frustrations).
I might be missing some but I've been pretty much in love with @Lovable, @Cursor, @bolt.new and have been trying to use @Replit more and I honestly haven't touched @BASE44 too much but have heard good things. @chrismessina has nudged me to use @Windsurf for whenever I build another Raycast Extension! Currently I use: - @bolt.new / @Lovable - @Cursor - @Warp Curious what everyone thinks is the top one so far!
I was inspired by @chrismessina to build my own Raycast extensions after he released his own! I have been using Raycast a lot more thanks to a gentle nudge from @jakecrump (and @Raycast's latest AI releases), so I knew I wanted to build my own Raycast extension at some point.
There was a lot of news about Cyberpunk for Mac released and I wanted to search if there was a deal for it on PC. I instinctively went to search Raycast .but it wasn t there. So my extension idea was born!
My goal was simple: make it easier to hunt for video game deals right from the Raycast command bar. What followed was a rapid journey of prototyping, debugging, and learning. I m excited to share what I learned and hope it will encourage more makers to ship their ideas. You can view my IsThereAnyDeal (ITAD) Extension on GitHub here! I will launch it when it's approved on the Raycast store :) I'll publish a more in-depth, nerdy guide later. But for now...here's my experience building a Raycast Extension!
I was inspired by @chrismessina to build my own Raycast extensions after he released his own! I have been using Raycast a lot more thanks to a gentle nudge from @jakecrump (and @Raycast's latest AI releases), so I knew I wanted to build my own Raycast extension at some point.
There was a lot of news about Cyberpunk for Mac released and I wanted to search if there was a deal for it on PC. I instinctively went to search Raycast .but it wasn t there. So my extension idea was born!
My goal was simple: make it easier to hunt for video game deals right from the Raycast command bar. What followed was a rapid journey of prototyping, debugging, and learning. I m excited to share what I learned and hope it will encourage more makers to ship their ideas. You can view my IsThereAnyDeal (ITAD) Extension on GitHub here! I will launch it when it's approved on the Raycast store :) I'll publish a more in-depth, nerdy guide later. But for now...here's my experience building a Raycast Extension!