ranchero.com

Brent Simmons’s linkblog

Joe Heck on agentic coding

Joe Heck writes, in Navigation Notes – Agentic coding:

The latest “frontier” models are north of 1.2 trillion parameters today, maybe bigger… Even with the breadth of data, it can only predict patterns that it’s seen before. The generalization jump at 100 billion parameters means that it can start to apply patterns it’s seen in one place to another, but it still has to have seen it somewhere.

Joe’s explanations and details are good and helpful to me — there’s so much I don’t know. But I think we all need to know and understand this stuff, whether we’re LLM users or not.

It is deeply annoying that this is such a huge topic right now. There’s a ton of other stuff going on and I don’t want to have to deal with this too. But we don’t have a choice.

ranchero.com no longer on hiatus

Sure, it’s been a while, but why not bring back the ol’ linkblog. 🐣🐥

I gave it a design very much inspired by what it used to look like in the mid-2000s — the idea was to make it look like I just started posting to it again. Easy as that.

The new/old design uses gradients. And Verdana! Love Verdana.

Vesper

Ranchero Software doesn’t have a new app — but Ranchero Software’s sister company Q Branch released Vesper. For iPhone.

This weblog on hiatus

So I can simplify things for myself and make it more likely I’ll actually post to my weblog, I’ve decided to put this weblog on hiatus and post everything on inessential.com.

That little bit of friction — answering the question of which weblog to post to — was enough to make posting seem like too much of a chore. So now I don’t have to answer that question.

Hopefully that means I’ll post more often. I’d like to.

QueueUp

Somehow I missed this news last week (and maybe you've already seen it) — my friend Patrick Burleson (BitBQ head bit-barbecuer) released QueueUp (iTunes link) on the App Store.

It's an app for quickly adding a movie to your Netflix queue. That's what it does.

I'm not a Netflix subscriber — but, if I was, I'd get this app right away. I love iPhone apps like this, that do a thing, that make it easy to not procrastinate and forget — and that make it fun.

Tweet Library for iPad

Riverfold Software — my friend Manton Reece — just released Tweet Library (iTunes link) on the iPad.

It's another Twitter client, yes — but it does a bunch that the other ones don't. It archives your tweets and provides filters and collections. Is Twitter important to you? You may need this.

There's a website that talks more about it — with screenshots and an intro video.

One of the cooler features: you can publish a collection of tweets to tweetlibrary.com. Lately I've been thinking about web-based features like that for my own software — so it will be interesting to watch tweetlibrary.com and see how it goes.

Congrats, Manton!

TouchUp for iPad

TouchUp (iTunes link) is a gorgeous new photo editing app from my friends at RogueSheep. Introductory price is 40% off, just $2.99.

I love it. Totally fun app. I had seen betas, but hadn't had the chance to use it much until just today. I'm impressed by their work, as usual — the attention to detail, to the sense of fun and delight, and to the generosity. The app even comes with screencast tutorials!

Before they released it, I figured the app would be $20 or $30. It's worth it. (And part of me wishes they had priced it like that, but I don't pretend to know their market they way they do, and so of course I respect their decision.) In other words — for $2.99, sheesh, just buy it.

Buy it even if you don't have a big need for a photo editor on your iPad. If you're an iPad developer, think of this is a tutorial app, like Postage (also from Rogue Sheep) — there's a lot to learn from this app, and I'm actually going to sit down with it and take some notes.

Signed up for free HTML5 class

In RogueSheep's recent post on Scholarly Shepherding, Chris talks about the UW Extension course on Cocoa. Though I'm not one of the teachers, I'm on the board — and I'm hugely proud of the teachers and students and folks at UW who made the first year such a success. Year two is starting soon, and there are still slots open for the eastside class. (Westside is on waiting list.)

Chris also mentions Jake Carter's HTML5 class. (Jake also does a lot of work on the UW class.) While I knew this was coming up, I didn't know it was a free online-video course from O'Reilly.

I signed up!

As developers we know that the more well-understood tools we have in our tool belt, the better craftsmen we are.

But the technology world is always uncertain — which tools should I learn? Which languages, which frameworks? How do I stay current? What would be most useful?

You might have trouble picking between SproutCore and Cappuccino, say, or Cocoa and the Android SDK.

But one thing is a no-brainer: you need to know HTML. And HTML5 is the new one, and Jake'll teach it to you. (And it's free.)

360 MacDev call for papers

I've very much enjoyed the previous 360 iPhone conferences — and the first 360 Mac conference is coming up this December. There's a call for papers — I'll be there, and I'd love to see a great line-up.

One thing that excites me about this is that the Mac doesn't have the restrictions that iOS development has. The Mac is the playground. It's where we get to have fun, where we get to try things, where things like JSTalk and MacRuby appear.

The anarchist in me remains enamoured of the Mac platform, more so than ever, and I'm super-excited for the future of Mac software. The conference could reflect that — with your help.

ShareKit

It's open-source sharing code for iOS apps: Twitter, Facebook, etc. I haven't looked at the code yet, but I definitely like the idea. Good for the ecosystem.

Would be cool if it worked for Macs, too.

On coding as if people are watching

Jeff LaMarche: "The other day, I saw somebody wearing a T-shirt that said 'Dance Like Nobody's Watching.' I'm not much of a dancer, but I like the sentiment. However, dancing is not coding. The worst thing you can do is code like nobody's watching."

Jeff makes a great point. I might sum it up as: do it right the first time, no matter what the pressure — it always pays off.

(I play a guest role in the addendum. The follow-on point being that code reviews — actually having people look at your code — are good too.)

At WWDC I called Jeff the "smartest guy in iPhone development." If you're a developer, you should subscribe to his feed. (But I bet you already have.)

Mac app design: always the same (ish)

Cocoa with Love: "But the classification of an application isn't a simple tree structure — there are many different connections. And the connections aren't simply of heredity — there are subclasses, view hierarchies, event hierarchies, control hierarchies and more."

Sometimes when I just want something good to read I go through the Cocoa with Love archive. I even read articles I've read before.

A Month of Mac

Brad Feld: "Ross (my IT guy) bet me $100 that I'd beg him to ship my Windows desktop to me within a few days of getting to Alaska. Help me win the bet."