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All speakers are announced at AIE EU, schedule coming soon. Join us there or in Miami with the renowned organizers of React Miami! Singapore CFP also open!We've called this out a few times over in AINews, but the overwhelming consensus in the Valley is that “the IDE is Dead”. In November it was just a gut feeling, but now we actually have data: even at the canonical “VSCode Fork” company, people are officially using more agents than tab autocomplete (the first wave of AI coding):Cursor has launched cloud agents for a few months now, and this specific launch is around Computer Use, which has come a long way since we first talked with Anthropic about it in 2024, and which Jonas productized as Autotab:We also take the opportunity to do a live demo, talk about slash commands and subagents, and the future of continual learning and personalized coding models, something that Sam previously worked on at New Computer. (The fact that both of these folks are top tier CEOs of their own startups that have now joined the insane talent density gathering at Cursor should also not be overlooked).Full Episode on YouTube!please like and subscribe!Timestamps00:00 Agentic Code Experiments00:53 Why Cloud Agents Matter02:08 Testing First Pillar03:36 Video Reviews Second Pillar04:29 Remote Control Third Pillar06:17 Meta Demos and Bug Repro13:36 Slash Commands and MCPs18:19 From Tab to Team Workflow31:41 Minimal Web UI Philosophy32:40 Why No File Editor34:38 Full Stack Cursor Debate36:34 Model Choice and Auto Routing38:34 Parallel Agents and Best Of N41:41 Subagents and Context Management44:48 Grind Mode and Throughput Future01:00:24 Cloud Agent Onboarding and MemoryTranscriptEP 77 - CURSOR - Audio version[00:00:00]Agentic Code ExperimentsSamantha: This is another experiment that we ran last year and didn't decide to ship at that time, but may come back to LM Judge, but one that was also agentic and could write code. So it wasn't just picking but also taking the learnings from two models or and models that it was looking at and writing a new diff.And what we found was that there were strengths to using models from different model providers as the base level of this process. Basically you could get almost like a synergistic output that was better than having a very unified like bottom model tier.Jonas: We think that over the coming months, the big unlock is not going to be one person with a model getting more done, like the water flowing faster and we'll be making the pipe much wider and so paralyzing more, whether that's swarms of agents or parallel agents, both of those are things that contribute to getting much more done in the same amount of time.Why Cloud Agents Matterswyx: This week, one of the biggest launches that Cursor's ever done is cloud agents. I think you, you had [00:01:00] cloud agents before, but this was like, you give cursor a computer, right? Yeah. So it's just basically they bought auto tab and then they repackaged it. Is that what's going on, or,Jonas: that's a big part of it.Yeah. Cloud agents already ran in their own computers, but they were sort of site reading code. Yeah. And those computers were not, they were like blank VMs typically that were not set up for the Devrel X for whatever repo the agents working on. One of the things that we talk about is if you put yourself in the model shoes and you were seeing tokens stream by and all you could do was cite read code and spit out tokens and hope that you had done the right thing,swyx: no chanceJonas: I'd be so bad.Like you obviously you need to run the code. And so that I think also is probably not that contrarian of a take, but no one has done that yet. And so giving the model the tools to onboard itself and then use full computer use end-to-end pixels in coordinates out and have the cloud computer with different apps in it is the big unlock that we've seen internally in terms of use usage of this going from, oh, we use it for little copy changes [00:02:00] to no.We're really like driving new features with this kind of new type of entech workflow. Alright, let's see it. Cool.Live Demo TourJonas: So this is what it looks like in cursor.com/agents. So this is one I kicked off a while ago. So on the left hand side is the chat. Very classic sort of agentic thing. The big new thing here is that the agent will test its changes.So you can see here it worked for half an hour. That is because it not only took time to write the tokens of code, it also took time to test them end to end. So it started Devrel servers iterate when needed. And so that's one part of it is like model works for longer and doesn't come back with a, I tried some things pr, but a I tested at pr that's ready for your review.One of the other intuition pumps we use there is if a human gave you a PR asked you to review it and you hadn't, they hadn't tested it, you'd also be annoyed because you'd be like, only ask me for a review once it's actually ready. So that's what we've done withTesting Defaults and Controlsswyx: simple question I wanted to gather out front.Some prs are way smaller, [00:03:00] like just copy change. Does it always do the video or is it sometimes,Jonas: Sometimes.swyx: Okay. So what's the judgment?Jonas: The model does it? So we we do some default prompting with sort. What types of changes to test? There's a slash command that people can do called slash no test, where if you do that, the model will not test,swyx: but the default is test.Jonas: The default is to be calibrated. So we tell it don't test, very simple copy changes, but test like more complex things. And then users can also write their agents.md and specify like this type of, if you're editing this subpart of my mono repo, never tested ‘cause that won't work or whatever.Videos and Remote ControlJonas: So pillar one is the model actually testing Pillar two is the model coming back with a video of what it did.We have found that in this new world where agents can end-to-end, write much more code, reviewing the code is one of these new bottlenecks that crop up. And so reviewing a video is not a substitute for reviewing code, but it is an entry point that is much, much easier to start with than glancing at [00:04:00] some giant diff.And so typically you kick one off you, it's done you come back and the first thing that you would do is watch this video. So this is a, video of it. In this case I wanted a tool tip over this button. And so it went and showed me what that looks like in, in this video that I think here, it actually used a gallery.So sometimes it will build storybook type galleries where you can see like that component in action. And so that's pillar two is like these demo videos of what it built. And then pillar number three is I have full remote control access to this vm. So I can go heat in here. I can hover things, I can type, I have full control.And same thing for the terminal. I have full access. And so that is also really useful because sometimes the video is like all you need to see. And oftentimes by the way, the video's not perfect, the video will show you, is this worth either merging immediately or oftentimes is this worth iterating with to get it to that final stage where I am ready to merge in.So I can go through some other examples where the first video [00:05:00] wasn't perfect, but it gave me confidence that we were on the right track and two or three follow-ups later, it was good to go. And then I also have full access here where some things you just wanna play around with. You wanna get a feel for what is this and there's no substitute to a live preview.And the VNC kind of VM remote access gives you that.swyx: Amazing What, sorry? What is VN. AndJonas: just the remote desktop. Remote desktop. Yeah.swyx: Sam, any other details that you always wanna call out?Samantha: Yeah, for me the videos have been super helpful. I would say, especially in cases where a common problem for me with agents and cloud agents beforehand was almost like under specification in my requests where our plan mode and going really back and forth and getting detailed implementation spec is a way to reduce the risk of under specification, but then similar to how human communication breaks down over time, I feel like you have this risk where it's okay, when I pull down, go to the triple of pulling down and like running this branch locally, I'm gonna see that, like I said, this should be a toggle and you have a checkbox and like, why didn't you get that detail?And having the video up front just [00:06:00] has that makes that alignment like you're talking about a shared artifact with the agent. Very clear, which has been just super helpful for me.Jonas: I can quickly run through some other Yes. Examples.Meta Agents and More DemosJonas: So this is a very front end heavy one. So one question I wasswyx: gonna say, is this only for frontJonas: end?Exactly. One question you might have is this only for front end? So this is another example where the thing I wanted it to implement was a better error message for saving secrets. So the cloud agents support adding secrets, that's part of what it needs to access certain systems. Part of onboarding that is giving access.This is cloud is working onswyx: cloud agents. Yes.Jonas: So this is a fun thing isSamantha: it can get super meta. ItJonas: can get super meta, it can start its own cloud agents, it can talk to its own cloud agents. Sometimes it's hard to wrap your mind around that. We have disabled, it's cloud agents starting more cloud agents. So we currently disallow that.Someday you might. Someday we might. Someday we might. So this actually was mostly a backend change in terms of the error handling here, where if the [00:07:00] secret is far too large, it would oh, this is actually really cool. Wow. That's the Devrel tools. That's the Devrel tools. So if the secret is far too large, we.Allow secrets above a certain size. We have a size limit on them. And the error message there was really bad. It was just some generic failed to save message. So I was like, Hey, we wanted an error message. So first cool thing it did here, zero prompting on how to test this. Instead of typing out the, like a character 5,000 times to hit the limit, it opens Devrel tools, writes js, or to paste into the input 5,000 characters of the letter A and then hit save, closes the Devrel tools, hit save and gets this new gets the new error message.So that looks like the video actually cut off, but here you can see the, here you can see the screenshot of the of the error message. What, so that is like frontend backend end-to-end feature to, to get that,swyx: yeah.Jonas: Andswyx: And you just need a full vm, full computer run everything.Okay. Yeah.Jonas: Yeah. So we've had versions of this. This is one of the auto tab lessons where we started that in 2022. [00:08:00] No, in 2023. And at the time it was like browser use, DOM, like all these different things. And I think we ended up very sort of a GI pilled in the sense that just give the model pixels, give it a box, a brain in a box is what you want and you want to remove limitations around context and capabilities such that the bottleneck should be the intelligence.And given how smart models are today, that's a very far out bottleneck. And so giving it its full VM and having it be onboarded with Devrel X set up like a human would is just been for us internally a really big step change in capability.swyx: Yeah I would say, let's call it a year ago the models weren't even good enough to do any of this stuff.SoSamantha: even six months ago. Yeah.swyx: So yeah what people have told me is like round about Sonder four fire is when this started being good enough to just automate fully by pixel.Jonas: Yeah, I think it's always a question of when is good enough. I think we found in particular with Opus 4 5, 4, 6, and Codex five three, that those were additional step [00:09:00] changes in the autonomy grade capabilities of the model to just.Go off and figure out the details and come back when it's done.swyx: I wanna appreciate a couple details. One 10 Stack Router. I see it. Yeah. I'm a big fan. Do you know any, I have to name the 10 Stack.Jonas: No.swyx: This just a random lore. Some buddy Sue Tanner. My and then the other thing if you switch back to the video.Jonas: Yeah.swyx: I wanna shout out this thing. Probably Sam did it. I don't knowJonas: the chapters.swyx: What is this called? Yeah, this is called Chapters. Yeah. It's like a Vimeo thing. I don't know. But it's so nice the design details, like the, and obviously a company called Cursor has to have a beautiful cursorSamantha: and it isswyx: the cursor.Samantha: Cursor.swyx: You see it branded? It's the cursor. Cursor, yeah. Okay, cool. And then I was like, I complained to Evan. I was like, okay, but you guys branded everything but the wallpaper. And he was like, no, that's a cursor wallpaper. I was like, what?Samantha: Yeah. Rio picked the wallpaper, I think. Yeah. The video.That's probably Alexi and yeah, a few others on the team with the chapters on the video. Matthew Frederico. There's been a lot of teamwork on this. It's a huge effort.swyx: I just, I like design details.Samantha: Yeah.swyx: And and then when you download it adds like a little cursor. Kind of TikTok clip. [00:10:00] Yes. Yes.So it's to make it really obvious is from Cursor,Jonas: we did the TikTok branding at the end. This was actually in our launch video. Alexi demoed the cloud agent that built that feature. Which was funny because that was an instance where one of the things that's been a consequence of having these videos is we use best of event where you run head to head different models on the same prompt.We use that a lot more because one of the complications with doing that before was you'd run four models and they would come back with some giant diff, like 700 lines of code times four. It's what are you gonna do? You're gonna review all that's horrible. But if you come back with four 22nd videos, yeah, I'll watch four 22nd videos.And then even if none of them is perfect, you can figure out like, which one of those do you want to iterate with, to get it over the line. Yeah. And so that's really been really fun.Bug Repro WorkflowJonas: Here's another example. That's we found really cool, which is we've actually turned since into a slash command as well slash [00:11:00] repro, where for bugs in particular, the model of having full access to the to its own vm, it can first reproduce the bug, make a video of the bug reproducing, fix the bug, make a video of the bug being fixed, like doing the same pattern workflow with obviously the bug not reproducing.And that has been the single category that has gone from like these types of bugs, really hard to reproduce and pick two tons of time locally, even if you try a cloud agent on it. Are you confident it actually fixed it to when this happens? You'll merge it in 90 seconds or something like that.So this is an example where, let me see if this is the broken one or the, okay, this is the fixed one. Okay. So we had a bug on cursor.com/agents where if you would attach images where remove them. Then still submit your prompt. They would actually still get attached to the prompt. Okay. And so here you can see Cursor is using, its full desktop by the way.This is one of the cases where if you just do, browse [00:12:00] use type stuff, you'll have a bad time. ‘cause now it needs to upload files. Like it just uses its native file viewer to do that. And so you can see here it's uploading files. It's going to submit a prompt and then it will go and open up. So this is the meta, this is cursor agent, prompting cursor agent inside its own environment.And so you can see here bug, there's five images attached, whereas when it's submitted, it only had one image.swyx: I see. Yeah. But you gotta enable that if you're gonna use cur agent inside cur.Jonas: Exactly. And so here, this is then the after video where it went, it does the same thing. It attaches images, removes, some of them hit send.And you can see here, once this agent is up, only one of the images is left in the attachments. Yeah.swyx: Beautiful.Jonas: Okay. So easy merge.swyx: So yeah. When does it choose to do this? Because this is an extra step.Jonas: Yes. I think I've not done a great job yet of calibrating the model on when to reproduce these things.Yeah. Sometimes it will do it of its own accord. Yeah. We've been conservative where we try to have it only do it when it's [00:13:00] quite sure because it does add some amount of time to how long it takes it to work on it. But we also have added things like the slash repro command where you can just do, fix this bug slash repro and then it will know that it should first make you a video of it actually finding and making sure it can reproduce the bug.swyx: Yeah. Yeah. One sort of ML topic this ties into is reward hacking, where while you write test that you update only pass. So first write test, it shows me it fails, then make you test pass, which is a classic like red green.Jonas: Yep.swyx: LikeJonas: A-T-D-D-T-D-Dswyx: thing.No, very cool. Was that the last demo? Is thereJonas: Yeah.Anything I missed on the demos or points that you think? I think thatSamantha: covers it well. Yeah.swyx: Cool. Before we stop the screen share, can you gimme like a, just a tour of the slash commands ‘cause I so God ready. Huh, what? What are the good ones?Samantha: Yeah, we wanna increase discoverability around this too.I think that'll be like a future thing we work on. Yeah. But there's definitely a lot of good stuff nowJonas: we have a lot of internal ones that I think will not be that interesting. Here's an internal one that I've made. I don't know if anyone else at Cursor uses this one. Fix bb.Samantha: I've never heard of it.Jonas: Yeah.[00:14:00]Fix Bug Bot. So this is a thing that we want to integrate more tightly on. So you made it forswyx: yourself.Jonas: I made this for myself. It's actually available to everyone in the team, but yeah, no one knows about it. But yeah, there will be Bug bot comments and so Bug Bot has a lot of cool things. We actually just launched Bug Bot Auto Fix, where you can click a button and or change a setting and it will automatically fix its own things, and that works great in a bunch of cases.There are some cases where having the context of the original agent that created the PR is really helpful for fixing the bugs, because it might be like, oh, the bug here is that this, is a regression and actually you meant to do something more like that. And so having the original prompt and all of the context of the agent that worked on it, and so here I could just do, fix or we used to be able to do fixed PB and it would do that.No test is another one that we've had. Slash repro is in here. We mentioned that one.Samantha: One of my favorites is cloud agent diagnosis. This is one that makes heavy use of the Datadog MCP. Okay. And I [00:15:00] think Nick and David on our team wrote, and basically if there is a problem with a cloud agent we'll spin up a bunch of subs.Like a singleswyx: instance.Samantha: Yeah. We'll take the ideas and argument and spin up a bunch of subagents using the Datadog MCP to explore the logs and find like all of the problems that could have happened with that. It takes the debugging time, like from potentially you can do quick stuff quickly with the Datadog ui, but it takes it down to, again, like a single agent call as opposed to trolling through logs yourself.Jonas: You should also talk about the stuff we've done with transcripts.Samantha: Yes. Also so basically we've also done some things internally. There'll be some versions of this as we ship publicly soon, where you can spit up an agent and give it access to another agent's transcript to either basically debug something that happened.So act as an external debugger. I see. Or continue the conversation. Almost like forking it.swyx: A transcript includes all the chain of thought for the 11 minutes here. 45 minutes there.Samantha: Yeah. That way. Exactly. So basically acting as a like secondary agent that debugs the first, so we've started to push more andswyx: they're all the same [00:16:00] code.It is just the different prompts, but the sa the same.Samantha: Yeah. So basically same cloud agent infrastructure and then same harness. And then like when we do things like include, there's some extra infrastructure that goes into piping in like an external transcript if we include it as an attachment.But for things like the cloud agent diagnosis, that's mostly just using the Datadog MCP. ‘Cause we also launched CPS along with along with this cloud agent launch, launch support for cloud agent cps.swyx: Oh, that was drawn out.Jonas: We won't, we'll be doing a bigger marketing moment for it next week, but, and you can now use CPS andswyx: People will listen to it as well.Yeah,Jonas: they'llSamantha: be ahead of the third. They'll be ahead. And I would I actually don't know if the Datadog CP is like publicly available yet. I realize this not sure beta testing it, but it's been one of my favorites to use. Soswyx: I think that one's interesting for Datadog. ‘cause Datadog wants to own that site.Interesting with Bits. I don't know if you've tried bits.Samantha: I haven't tried bits.swyx: Yeah.Jonas: That's their cloud agentswyx: product. Yeah. Yeah. They want to be like we own your logs and give us our, some part of the, [00:17:00] self-healing software that everyone wants. Yeah. But obviously Cursor has a strong opinion on coding agents and you, you like taking away from the which like obviously you're going to do, and not every company's like Cursor, but it's interesting if you're a Datadog, like what do you do here?Do you expose your logs to FDP and let other people do it? Or do you try to own that it because it's extra business for you? Yeah. It's like an interesting one.Samantha: It's a good question. All I know is that I love the Datadog MCP,Jonas: And yeah, it is gonna be no, no surprise that people like will demand it, right?Samantha: Yeah.swyx: It's, it's like anysystemswyx: of record company like this, it's like how much do you give away? Cool. I think that's that for the sort of cloud agents tour. Cool. And we just talk about like cloud agents have been when did Kirsten loves cloud agents? Do you know, in JuneJonas: last year.swyx: June last year. So it's been slowly develop the thing you did, like a bunch of, like Michael did a post where himself, where he like showed this chart of like ages overtaking tap. And I'm like, wow, this is like the biggest transition in code.Jonas: Yeah.swyx: Like in, in [00:18:00] like the last,Jonas: yeah. I think that kind of got turned out.Yeah. I think it's a very interest,swyx: not at all. I think it's been highlighted by our friend Andre Kati today.Jonas: Okay.swyx: Talk more about it. What does it mean? Yeah. Is I just got given like the cursor tab key.Jonas: Yes. Yes.swyx: That's that'sSamantha: cool.swyx: I know, but it's gonna be like put in a museum.Jonas: It is.Samantha: I have to say I haven't used tab a little bit myself.Jonas: Yeah. I think that what it looks like to code with AI code generally creates software, even if you want to go higher level. Is changing very rapidly. No, not a hot take, but I think from our vendor's point at Cursor, I think one of the things that is probably underappreciated from the outside is that we are extremely self-aware about that fact and Kerscher, got its start in phase one, era one of like tab and auto complete.And that was really useful in its time. But a lot of people start looking at text files and editing code, like we call it hand coding. Now when you like type out the actual letters, it'sswyx: oh that's cute.Jonas: Yeah.swyx: Oh that's cute.Jonas: You're so boomer. So boomer. [00:19:00] And so that I think has been a slowly accelerating and now in the last few months, rapidly accelerating shift.And we think that's going to happen again with the next thing where the, I think some of the pains around tab of it's great, but I actually just want to give more to the agent and I don't want to do one tab at a time. I want to just give it a task and it goes off and does a larger unit of work and I can.Lean back a little bit more and operate at that higher level of abstraction that's going to happen again, where it goes from agents handing you back diffs and you're like in the weeds and giving it, 32nd to three minute tasks, to, you're giving it, three minute to 30 minute to three hour tasks and you're getting back videos and trying out previews rather than immediately looking at diffs every single time.swyx: Yeah. Anything to add?Samantha: One other shift that I've noticed as our cloud agents have really taken off internally has been a shift from primarily individually driven development to almost this collaborative nature of development for us, slack is actually almost like a development on [00:20:00] Id basically.So Iswyx: like maybe don't even build a custom ui, like maybe that's like a debugging thing, but actually it's that.Samantha: I feel like, yeah, there's still so much to left to explore there, but basically for us, like Slack is where a lot of development happens. Like we will have these issue channels or just like this product discussion channels where people are always at cursing and that kicks off a cloud agent.And for us at least, we have team follow-ups enabled. So if Jonas kicks off at Cursor in a thread, I can follow up with it and add more context. And so it turns into almost like a discussion service where people can like collaborate on ui. Oftentimes I will kick off an investigation and then sometimes I even ask it to get blame and then tag people who should be brought in. ‘cause it can tag people in Slack and then other people will comeswyx: in, can tag other people who are not involved in conversation. Yes. Can just do at Jonas if say, was talking to,Samantha: yeah.swyx: That's cool. You should, you guys should make a big good deal outta that.Samantha: I know. It's a lot to, I feel like there's a lot more to do with our slack surface area to show people externally. But yeah, basically like it [00:21:00] can bring other people in and then other people can also contribute to that thread and you can end up with a PR again, with the artifacts visible and then people can be like, okay, cool, we can merge this.So for us it's like the ID is almost like moving into Slack in some ways as well.swyx: I have the same experience with, but it's not developers, it's me. Designer salespeople.Samantha: Yeah.swyx: So me on like technical marketing, vision, designer on design and then salespeople on here's the legal source of what we agreed on.And then they all just collaborate and correct. The agents,Jonas: I think that we found when these threads is. The work that is left, that the humans are discussing in these threads is the nugget of what is actually interesting and relevant. It's not the boring details of where does this if statement go?It's do we wanna ship this? Is this the right ux? Is this the right form factor? Yeah. How do we make this more obvious to the user? It's like those really interesting kind of higher order questions that are so easy to collaborate with and leave the implementation to the cloud agent.Samantha: Totally. And no more discussion of am I gonna do this? Are you [00:22:00] gonna do this cursor's doing it? You just have to decide. You like it.swyx: Sometimes the, I don't know if there's a, this probably, you guys probably figured this out already, but since I, you need like a mute button. So like cursor, like we're going to take this offline, but still online.But like we need to talk among the humans first. Before you like could stop responding to everything.Jonas: Yeah. This is a design decision where currently cursor won't chime in unless you explicitly add Mention it. Yeah. Yeah.Samantha: So it's not always listening.Yeah.Jonas: I can see all the intermediate messages.swyx: Have you done the recursive, can cursor add another cursor or spawn another cursor?Samantha: Oh,Jonas: we've done some versions of this.swyx: Because, ‘cause it can add humans.Jonas: Yes. One of the other things we've been working on that's like an implication of generating the code is so easy is getting it to production is still harder than it should be.And broadly, you solve one bottleneck and three new ones pop up. Yeah. And so one of the new bottlenecks is getting into production and we have a like joke internally where you'll be talking about some feature and someone says, I have a PR for that. Which is it's so easy [00:23:00] to get to, I a PR for that, but it's hard still relatively to get from I a PR for that to, I'm confident and ready to merge this.And so I think that over the coming weeks and months, that's a thing that we think a lot about is how do we scale up compute to that pipeline of getting things from a first draft An agent did.swyx: Isn't that what Merge isn't know what graphite's for, likeJonas: graphite is a big part of that. The cloud agent testingswyx: Is it fully integrated or still different companiesJonas: working on I think we'll have more to share there in the future, but the goal is to have great end-to-end experience where Cursor doesn't just help you generate code tokens, it helps you create software end-to-end.And so review is a big part of that, that I think especially as models have gotten much better at writing code, generating code, we've felt that relatively crop up more,swyx: sorry this is completely unplanned, but like there I have people arguing one to you need ai. To review ai and then there is another approach, thought school of thought where it's no, [00:24:00] reviews are dead.Like just show me the video. It's it like,Samantha: yeah. I feel again, for me, the video is often like alignment and then I often still wanna go through a code review process.swyx: Like still look at the files andSamantha: everything. Yeah. There's a spectrum of course. Like the video, if it's really well done and it does like fully like test everything, you can feel pretty competent, but it's still helpful to, to look at the code.I make hep pay a lot of attention to bug bot. I feel like Bug Bot has been a great really highly adopted internally. We often like, won't we tell people like, don't leave bug bot comments unaddressed. ‘cause we have such high confidence in it. So people always address their bug bot comments.Jonas: Once you've had two cases where you merged something and then you went back later, there was a bug in it, you merged, you went back later and you were like, ah, bug Bot had found that I should have listened to Bug Bot.Once that happens two or three times, you learn to wait for bug bot.Samantha: Yeah. So I think for us there's like that code level review where like it's looking at the actual code and then there's like the like feature level review where you're looking at the features. There's like a whole number of different like areas.There'll probably eventually be things like performance level review, security [00:25:00] review, things like that where it's like more more different aspects of how this feature might affect your code base that you want to potentially leverage an agent to help with.Jonas: And some of those like bug bot will be synchronous and you'll typically want to wait on before you merge.But I think another thing that we're starting to see is. As with cloud agents, you scale up this parallelism and how much code you generate. 10 person startups become, need the Devrel X and pipelines that a 10,000 person company used to need. And that looks like a lot of the things I think that 10,000 person companies invented in order to get that volume of software to production safely.So that's things like, release frequently or release slowly, have different stages where you release, have checkpoints, automated ways of detecting regressions. And so I think we're gonna need stacks merg stack diffs merge queues. Exactly. A lot of those things are going to be importantswyx: forward with.I think the majority of people still don't know what stack stacks are. And I like, I have many friends in Facebook and like I, I'm pretty friendly with graphite. I've just, [00:26:00] I've never needed it ‘cause I don't work on that larger team and it's just like democratization of no, only here's what we've already worked out at very large scale and here's how you can, it benefits you too.Like I think to me, one of the beautiful things about GitHub is that. It's actually useful to me as an individual solo developer, even though it's like actually collaboration software.Jonas: Yep.swyx: And I don't think a lot of Devrel tools have figured that out yet. That transition from like large down to small.Jonas: Yeah. Kers is probably an inverse story.swyx: This is small down toJonas: Yeah. Where historically Kers share, part of why we grew so quickly was anyone on the team could pick it up and in fact people would pick it up, on the weekend for their side project and then bring it into work. ‘cause they loved using it so much.swyx: Yeah.Jonas: And I think a thing that we've started working on a lot more, not us specifically, but as a company and other folks at Cursor, is making it really great for teams and making it the, the 10th person that starts using Cursor in a team. Is immediately set up with things like, we launched Marketplace recently so other people can [00:27:00] configure what CPS and skills like plugins.So skills and cps, other people can configure that. So that my cursor is ready to go and set up. Sam loves the Datadog, MCP and Slack, MCP you've also been using a lot butSamantha: also pre-launch, but I feel like it's so good.Jonas: Yeah, my cursor should be configured if Sam feels strongly that's just amazing and required.swyx: Is it automatically shared or you have to go and.Jonas: It depends on the MCP. So some are obviously off per user. Yeah. And so Sam can't off my cursor with my Slack MCP, but some are team off and those can be set up by admins.swyx: Yeah. Yeah. That's cool. Yeah, I think, we had a man on the pod when cursor was five people, and like everyone was like, okay, what's the thing?And then it's usually something teams and org and enterprise, but it's actually working. But like usually at that stage when you're five, when you're just a vs. Code fork it's like how do you get there? Yeah. Will people pay for this? People do pay for it.Jonas: Yeah. And I think for cloud agents, we expect.[00:28:00]To have similar kind of PLG things where I think off the bat we've seen a lot of adoption with kind of smaller teams where the code bases are not quite as complex to set up. Yes. If you need some insane docker layer caching thing for builds not to take two hours, that's going to take a little bit longer for us to be able to support that kind of infrastructure.Whereas if you have front end backend, like one click agents can install everything that they need themselves.swyx: This is a good chance for me to just ask some technical sort of check the box questions. Can I choose the size of the vm?Jonas: Not yet. We are planning on adding that. Weswyx: have, this is obviously you want like LXXL, whatever, right?Like it's like the Amazon like sort menu.Jonas: Yes, exactly. We'll add that.swyx: Yeah. In some ways you have to basically become like a EC2, almost like you rent a box.Jonas: You rent a box. Yes. We talk a lot about brain in a box. Yeah. So cursor, we want to be a brain in a box,swyx: but is the mental model different? Is it more serverless?Is it more persistent? Is. Something else.Samantha: We want it to be a bit persistent. The desktop should be [00:29:00] something you can return to af even after some days. Like maybe you go back, they're like still thinking about a feature for some period of time. So theswyx: full like sus like suspend the memory and bring it back and then keep going.Samantha: Exactly.swyx: That's an interesting one because what I actually do want, like from a manna and open crawl, whatever, is like I want to be able to log in with my credentials to the thing, but not actually store it in any like secret store, whatever. ‘cause it's like this is the, my most sensitive stuff.Yeah. This is like my email, whatever. And just have it like, persist to the image. I don't know how it was hood, but like to rehydrate and then just keep going from there. But I don't think a lot of infra works that way. A lot of it's stateless where like you save it to a docker image and then it's only whatever you can describe in a Docker file and that's it.That's the only thing you can cl multiple times in parallel.Jonas: Yeah. We have a bunch of different ways of setting them up. So there's a dockerfile based approach. The main default way is actually snapshottingswyx: like a Linux vmJonas: like vm, right? You run a bunch of install commands and then you snapshot more or less the file system.And so that gets you set up for everything [00:30:00] that you would want to bring a new VM up from that template basically.swyx: Yeah.Jonas: And that's a bit distinct from what Sam was talking about with the hibernating and re rehydrating where that is a full memory snapshot as well. So there, if I had like the browser open to a specific page and we bring that back, that page will still be there.swyx: Was there any discussion internally and just building this stuff about every time you shoot a video it's actually you show a little bit of the desktop and the browser and it's not necessary if you just show the browser. If, if you know you're just demoing a front end application.Why not just show the browser, right? Like it Yeah,Samantha: we do have some panning and zooming. Yeah. Like it can decide that when it's actually recording and cutting the video to highlight different things. I think we've played around with different ways of segmenting it and yeah. There's been some different revs on it for sure.Jonas: Yeah. I think one of the interesting things is the version that you see now in cursor.com actually is like half of what we had at peak where we decided to unshift or unshipped quite a few things. So two of the interesting things to talk about, one is directly an answer to your [00:31:00] question where we had native browser that you would have locally, it was basically an iframe that via port forwarding could load the URL could talk to local host in the vm.So that gets you basically, so inswyx: your machine's browser,likeJonas: in your local browser? Yeah. You would go to local host 4,000 and that would get forwarded to local host 4,000 in the VM via port forward. We unshift that like atswyx: Eng Rock.Jonas: Like an Eng Rock. Exactly. We unshift that because we felt that the remote desktop was sufficiently low latency and more general purpose.So we build Cursor web, but we also build Cursor desktop. And so it's really useful to be able to have the full spectrum of things. And even for Cursor Web, as you saw in one of the examples, the agent was uploading files and like I couldn't upload files and open the file viewer if I only had access to the browser.And we've thought a lot about, this might seem funny coming from Cursor where we started as this, vs. Code Fork and I think inherited a lot of amazing things, but also a lot [00:32:00] of legacy UI from VS Code.Minimal Web UI SurfacesJonas: And so with the web UI we wanted to be very intentional about keeping that very minimal and exposing the right sum of set of primitive sort of app surfaces we call them, that are shared features of that cloud.Environment that you and the agent both use. So agent uses desktop and controls it. I can use desktop and controlled agent runs terminal commands. I can run terminal commands. So that's how our philosophy around it. The other thing that is maybe interesting to talk about that we unshipped is and we may, both of these things we may reship and decide at some point in the future that we've changed our minds on the trade offs or gotten it to a point where, putswyx: it out there.Let users tell you they want it. Exactly. Alright, fine.Why No File EditorJonas: So one of the other things is actually a files app. And so we used to have the ability at one point during the process of testing this internally to see next to, I had GID desktop and terminal on the right hand side of the tab there earlier to also have a files app where you could see and edit files.And we actually felt that in some [00:33:00] ways, by restricting and limiting what you could do there, people would naturally leave more to the agent and fall into this new pattern of delegating, which we thought was really valuable. And there's currently no way in Cursor web to edit these files.swyx: Yeah. Except you like open up the PR and go into GitHub and do the thing.Jonas: Yeah.swyx: Which is annoying.Jonas: Just tell the agent,swyx: I have criticized open AI for this. Because Open AI is Codex app doesn't have a file editor, like it has file viewer, but isn't a file editor.Jonas: Do you use the file viewer a lot?swyx: No. I understand, but like sometimes I want it, the one way to do it is like freaking going to no, they have a open in cursor button or open an antigravity or, opening whatever and people pointed that.So I was, I was part of the early testers group people pointed that and they were like, this is like a design smell. It's like you actually want a VS. Code fork that has all these things, but also a file editor. And they were like, no, just trust us.Jonas: Yeah. I think we as Cursor will want to, as a product, offer the [00:34:00] whole spectrum and so you want to be able to.Work at really high levels of abstraction and double click and see the lowest level. That's important. But I also think that like you won't be doing that in Slack. And so there are surfaces and ways of interacting where in some cases limiting the UX capabilities makes for a cleaner experience that's more simple and drives people into these new patterns where even locally we kicked off joking about this.People like don't really edit files, hand code anymore. And so we want to build for where that's going and not where it's beenswyx: a lot of cool stuff. And Okay. I have a couple more.Full Stack Hosting Debateswyx: So observations about the design elements about these things. One of the things that I'm always thinking about is cursor and other peers of cursor start from like the Devrel tools and work their way towards cloud agents.Other people, like the lovable and bolts of the world start with here's like the vibe code. Full cloud thing. They were already cloud edges before anyone else cloud edges and we will give you the full deploy platform. So we own the whole loop. We own all the infrastructure, we own, we, we have the logs, we have the the live site, [00:35:00] whatever.And you can do that cycle cursor doesn't own that cycle even today. You don't have the versal, you don't have the, you whatever deploy infrastructure that, that you're gonna have, which gives you powers because anyone can use it. And any enterprise who, whatever you infra, I don't care. But then also gives you limitations as to how much you can actually fully debug end to end.I guess I'm just putting out there that like is there a future where there's like full stack cursor where like cursor apps.com where like I host my cursor site this, which is basically a verse clone, right? I don't know.Jonas: I think that's a interesting question to be asking, and I think like the logic that you laid out for how you would get there is logic that I largely agree with.swyx: Yeah. Yeah.Jonas: I think right now we're really focused on what we see as the next big bottleneck and because things like the Datadog MCP exist, yeah. I don't think that the best way we can help our customers ship more software. Is by building a hosting solution right now,swyx: by the way, these are things I've actually discussed with some of the companies I just named.Jonas: Yeah, for sure. Right now, just this big bottleneck is getting the code out there and also [00:36:00] unlike a lovable in the bolt, we focus much more on existing software. And the zero to one greenfield is just a very different problem. Imagine going to a Shopify and convincing them to deploy on your deployment solution.That's very different and I think will take much longer to see how that works. May never happen relative to, oh, it's like a zero to one app.swyx: I'll say. It's tempting because look like 50% of your apps are versal, superb base tailwind react it's the stack. It's what everyone does.So I it's kinda interesting.Jonas: Yeah.Model Choice and Auto Routingswyx: The other thing is the model select dying. Right now in cloud agents, it's stuck down, bottom left. Sure it's Codex High today, but do I care if it's suddenly switched to Opus? Probably not.Samantha: We definitely wanna give people a choice across models because I feel like it, the meta change is very frequently.I was a big like Opus 4.5 Maximalist, and when codex 5.3 came out, I hard, hard switch. So that's all I use now.swyx: Yeah. Agreed. I don't know if, but basically like when I use it in Slack, [00:37:00] right? Cursor does a very good job of exposing yeah. Cursors. If people go use it, here's the model we're using.Yeah. Here's how you switch if you want. But otherwise it's like extracted away, which is like beautiful because then you actually, you should decide.Jonas: Yeah, I think we want to be doing more with defaults.swyx: Yeah.Jonas: Where we can suggest things to people. A thing that we have in the editor, the desktop app is auto, which will route your request and do things there.So I think we will want to do something like that for cloud agents as well. We haven't done it yet. And so I think. We have both people like Sam, who are very savvy and want know exactly what model they want, and we also have people that want us to pick the best model for them because we have amazing people like Sam and we, we are the experts.Yeah. We have both the traffic and the internal taste and experience to know what we think is best.swyx: Yeah. I have this ongoing pieces of agent lab versus model lab. And to me, cursor and other companies are example of an agent lab that is, building a new playbook that is different from a model lab where it's like very GP heavy Olo.So obviously has a research [00:38:00] team. And my thesis is like you just, every agent lab is going to have a router because you're going to be asked like, what's what. I don't keep up to every day. I'm not a Sam, I don't keep up every day for using you as sample the arm arbitrator of taste. Put me on CRI Auto.Is it free? It's not free.Jonas: Auto's not free, but there's different pricing tiers. Yeah.swyx: Put me on Chris. You decide from me based on all the other people you know better than me. And I think every agent lab should basically end up doing this because that actually gives you extra power because you like people stop carrying or having loyalty with one lab.Jonas: Yeah.Best Of N and Model CouncilsJonas: Two other maybe interesting things that I don't know how much they're on your radar are one the best event thing we mentioned where running different models head to head is actually quite interesting becauseswyx: which exists in cursor.Jonas: That exists in cur ID and web. So the problem is where do you run them?swyx: Okay.Jonas: And so I, I can share my screen if that's interesting. Yeahinteresting.swyx: Yeah. Yeah. Obviously parallel agents, very popal.Jonas: Yes, exactly. Parallel agentsswyx: in you mind. Are they the same thing? Best event and parallel agents? I don't want to [00:39:00] put words in your mouth.Jonas: Best event is a subset of parallel agents where they're running on the same prompt.That would be my answer. So this is what that looks like. And so here in this dropdown picker, I can just select multiple models.swyx: Yeah.Jonas: And now if I do a prompt, I'm going to do something silly. I am running these five models.swyx: Okay. This is this fake clone, of course. The 2.0 yeah.Jonas: Yes, exactly. But they're running so the cursor 2.0, you can do desktop or cloud.So this is cloud specifically where the benefit over work trees is that they have their own VMs and can run commands and won't try to kill ports that the other one is running. Which are some of the pains. These are allswyx: called work trees?Jonas: No, these are all cloud agents with their own VMs.swyx: Okay. ButJonas: When you do it locally, sometimes people do work trees and that's been the main way that people have set out parallel so far.I've gotta say.swyx: That's so confusing for folks.Jonas: Yeah.swyx: No one knows what work trees are.Jonas: Exactly. I think we're phasing out work trees.swyx: Really.Jonas: Yeah.swyx: Okay.Samantha: But yeah. And one other thing I would say though on the multimodel choice, [00:40:00] so this is another experiment that we ran last year and the decide to ship at that time but may come back to, and there was an interesting learning that's relevant for, these different model providers. It was something that would run a bunch of best of ends but then synthesize and basically run like a synthesizer layer of models. And that was other agents that would take LM Judge, but one that was also agentic and could write code. So it wasn't just picking but also taking the learnings from two models or, and models that it was looking at and writing a new diff.And what we found was that at the time at least, there were strengths to using models from different model providers as the base level of this process. Like basically you could get almost like a synergistic output that was better than having a very unified, like bottom model tier. So it was really interesting ‘cause it's like potentially, even though even in the future when you have like maybe one model as ahead of the other for a little bit, there could be some benefit from having like multiple top tier models involved in like a [00:41:00] model swarm or whatever agent Swarm that you're doing, that they each have strengths and weaknesses.Yeah.Jonas: Andre called this the council, right?Samantha: Yeah, exactly. We actually, oh, that's another internal command we have that Ian wrote slash council. Oh, and they some, yeah.swyx: Yes. This idea is in various forms everywhere. And I think for me, like for me, the productization of it, you guys have done yeah, like this is very flexible, but.If I were to add another Yeah, what your thing is on here it would be too much. I what, let's say,Samantha: Ideally it's all, it's something that the user can just choose and it all happens under the hood in a way where like you just get the benefit of that process at the end and better output basically, but don't have to get too lost in the complexity of judging along the way.Jonas: Okay.Subagents for ContextJonas: Another thing on the many agents, on different parallel agents that's interesting is an idea that's been around for a while as well that has started working recently is subagents. And so this is one other way to get agents of the different prompts and different goals and different models, [00:42:00] different vintages to work together.Collaborate and delegate.swyx: Yeah. I'm very like I like one of my, I always looking for this is the year of the blah, right? Yeah. I think one of the things on the blahs is subs. I think this is of but I haven't used them in cursor. Are they fully formed or how do I honestly like an intro because do I form them from new every time?Do I have fixed subagents? How are they different for slash commands? There's all these like really basic questions that no one stops to answer for people because everyone's just like too busy launching. We have toSamantha: honestly, you could, you can see them in cursor now if you just say spin up like 50 subagents to, so cursor definesswyx: what Subagents.Yeah.Samantha: Yeah. So basically I think I shouldn't speak for the whole subagents team. This is like a different team that's been working on this, but our thesis or thing that we saw internally is that like they're great for context management for kind of long running threads, or if you're trying to just throw more compute at something.We have strongly used, almost like a generic task interface where then the main agent can define [00:43:00] like what goes into the subagent. So if I say explore my code base, it might decide to spin up an explore subagent and or might decide to spin up five explore subagent.swyx: But I don't get to set what those subagent are, right?It's all defined by a model.Samantha: I think. I actually would have to refresh myself on the sub agent interface.Jonas: There are some built-in ones like the explore subagent is free pre-built. But you can also instruct the model to use other subagents and then it will. And one other example of a built-in subagent is I actually just kicked one off in cursor and I can show you what that looks like.swyx: Yes. Because I tried to do this in pure prompt space.Jonas: So this is the desktop app? Yeah. Yeah. And that'sswyx: all you need to do, right? Yeah.Jonas: That's all you need to do. So I said use a sub agent to explore and I think, yeah, so I can even click in and see what the subagent is working on here. It ran some fine command and this is a composer under the hood.Even though my main model is Opus, it does smart routing to take, like in this instance the explorer sort of requires reading a ton of things. And so a faster model is really useful to get an [00:44:00] answer quickly, but that this is what subagent look like. And I think we wanted to do a lot more to expose hooks and ways for people to configure these.Another example of a cus sort of builtin subagent is the computer use subagent in the cloud agents, where we found that those trajectories can be long and involve a lot of images obviously, and execution of some testing verification task. We wanted to use that models that are particularly good at that.So that's one reason to use subagents. And then the other reason to use subagents is we want contexts to be summarized reduced down at a subagent level. That's a really neat boundary at which to compress that rollout and testing into a final message that agent writes that then gets passed into the parent rather than having to do some global compaction or something like that.swyx: Awesome. Cool. While we're in the subagents conversation, I can't do a cursor conversation and not talk about listen stuff. What is that? What is what? He built a browser. He built an os. Yes. And he [00:45:00] experimented with a lot of different architectures and basically ended up reinventing the software engineer org chart.This is all cool, but what's your take? What's, is there any hole behind the side? The scenes stories about that kind of, that whole adventure.Samantha: Some of those experiments have found their way into a feature that's available in cloud agents now, the long running agent mode internally, we call it grind mode.And I think there's like some hint of grind mode accessible in the picker today. ‘cause you can do choose grind until done. And so that was really the result of experiments that Wilson started in this vein where he I think the Ralph Wigga loop was like floating around at the time, but it was something he also independently found and he was experimenting with.And that was what led to this product surface.swyx: And it is just simple idea of have criteria for completion and do not. Until you complete,Samantha: there's a bit more complexity as well in, in our implementation. Like there's a specific, you have to start out by aligning and there's like a planning stage where it will work with you and it will not get like start grind execution mode until it's decided that the [00:46:00] plan is amenable to both of you.Basically,swyx: I refuse to work until you make me happy.Jonas: We found that it's really important where people would give like very underspecified prompt and then expect it to come back with magic. And if it's gonna go off and work for three minutes, that's one thing. When it's gonna go off and work for three days, probably should spend like a few hours upfront making sure that you have communicated what you actually want.swyx: Yeah. And just to like really drive from the point. We really mean three days that No, noJonas: human. Oh yeah. We've had three day months innovation whatsoever.Samantha: I don't know what the record is, but there's been a long time with the grantsJonas: and so the thing that is available in cursor. The long running agent is if you wanna think about it, very abstractly that is like one worker node.Whereas what built the browser is a society of workers and planners and different agents collaborating. Because we started building the browser with one worker node at the time, that was just the agent. And it became one worker node when we realized that the throughput of the system was not where it needed to be [00:47:00] to get something as large of a scale as the browser done.swyx: Yeah.Jonas: And so this has also become a really big mental model for us with cloud, cloud agents is there's the classic engineering latency throughput trade-offs. And so you know, the code is water flowing through a pipe. The, we think that over the coming months, the big unlock is not going to be one person with a model getting more done, like the water flowing faster and we'll be making the pipe much wider and so ing more, whether that's swarms of agents or parallel agents, both of those are things that contribute to getting.Much more done in the same amount of time, but any one of those tasks doesn't necessarily need to get done that quickly. And throughput is this really big thing where if you see the system of a hundred concurrent agents outputting thousands of tokens a second, you can't go back like that.Just you see a glimpse of the future where obviously there are many caveats. Like no one is using this browser. IRL. There's like a bunch of things not quite right yet, but we are going to get to systems that produce real production [00:48:00] code at the scale much sooner than people think. And it forces you to think what even happens to production systems. Like we've broken our GitHub actions recently because we have so many agents like producing and pushing code that like CICD is just overloaded. ‘cause suddenly it's like effectively weg grew, cursor's growing very quickly anyway, but you grow head count, 10 x when people run 10 x as many agents.And so a lot of these systems, exactly, a lot of these systems will need to adapt.swyx: It also reminds me, we, we all, the three of us live in the app layer, but if you talk to the researchers who are doing RL infrastructure, it's the same thing. It's like all these parallel rollouts and scheduling them and making sure as much throughput as possible goes through them.Yeah, it's the same thing.Jonas: We were talking briefly before we started recording. You were mentioning memory chips and some of the shortages there. The other thing that I think is just like hard to wrap your head around the scale of the system that was building the browser, the concurrency there.If Sam and I both have a system like that running for us, [00:49:00] shipping our software. The amount of inference that we're going to need per developer is just really mind-boggling. And that makes, sometimes when I think about that, I think that even with, the most optimistic projections for what we're going to need in terms of buildout, our underestimating, the extent to which these swarm systems can like churn at scale to produce code that is valuable to the economy.And,swyx: yeah, you can cut this if it's sensitive, but I was just Do you have estimates of how much your token consumption is?Jonas: Like per developer?swyx: Yeah. Or yourself. I don't need like comfy average. I just curious. ISamantha: feel like I, for a while I wasn't an admin on the usage dashboard, so I like wasn't able to actually see, but it was a,swyx: mine has gone up.Samantha: Oh yeah.swyx: But I thinkSamantha: it's in terms of how much work I'm doing, it's more like I have no worries about developers losing their jobs, at least in the near term. ‘cause I feel like that's a more broad discussion.swyx: Yeah. Yeah. You went there. I didn't go, I wasn't going there.I was just like how much more are you using?Samantha: There's so much stuff to be built. And so I feel like I'm basically just [00:50:00] trying to constantly I have more ambitions than I did before. Yes. Personally. Yes. So can't speak to the broader thing. But for me it's like I'm busier than ever before.I'm using more tokens and I am also doing more things.Jonas: Yeah. Yeah. I don't have the stats for myself, but I think broadly a thing that we've seen, that we expect to continue is J'S paradox. Whereswyx: you can't do it in our podcast without seeingJonas: it. Exactly. We've done it. Now we can wrap. We've done, we said the words.Phase one tab auto complete people paid like 20 bucks a month. And that was great. Phase two where you were iterating with these local models. Today people pay like hundreds of dollars a month. I think as we think about these highly parallel kind of agents running off for a long times in their own VM system, we are already at that point where people will be spending thousands of dollars a month per human, and I think potentially tens of thousands and beyond, where it's not like we are greedy for like capturing more money, but what happens is just individuals get that much more leverage.And if one person can do as much as 10 people, yeah. That tool that allows ‘em to do that is going to be tremendously valuable [00:51:00] and worth investing in and taking the best thing that exists.swyx: One more question on just the cursor in general and then open-ended for you guys to plug whatever you wanna put.How is Cursor hiring these days?Samantha: What do you mean by how?swyx: So obviously lead code is dead. Oh,Samantha: okay.swyx: Everyone says work trial. Different people have different levels of adoption of agents. Some people can really adopt can be much more productive. But other people, you just need to give them a little bit of time.And sometimes they've never lived in a token rich place like cursor.And once you live in a token rich place, you're you just work differently. But you need to have done that. And a lot of people anyway, it was just open-ended. Like how has agentic engineering, agentic coding changed your opinions on hiring?Is there any like broad like insights? Yeah.Jonas: Basically I'm asking this for other people, right? Yeah, totally. Totally. To hear Sam's opinion, we haven't talked about this the two of us. I think that we don't see necessarily being great at the latest thing with AI coding as a prerequisite.I do think that's a sign that people are keeping up and [00:52:00] curious and willing to upscale themselves in what's happening because. As we were talking about the last three months, the game has completely changed. It's like what I do all day is very different.swyx: Like it's my job and I can't,Jonas: Yeah, totally.I do think that still as Sam was saying, the fundamentals remain important in the current age and being able to go and double click down. And models today do still have weaknesses where if you let them run for too long without cleaning up and refactoring, the coke will get sloppy and there'll be bad abstractions.And so you still do need humans that like have built systems before, no good patterns when they see them and know where to steer things.Samantha: I would agree with that. I would say again, cursor also operates very quickly and leveraging ag agentic engineering is probably one reason why that's possible in this current moment.I think in the past it was just like people coding quickly and now there's like people who use agents to move faster as well. So it's part of our process will always look for we'll select for kind of that ability to make good decisions quickly and move well in this environment.And so I think being able to [00:53:00] figure out how to use agents to help you do that is an important part of it too.swyx: Yeah. Okay. The fork in the road, either predictions for the end of the year, if you have any, or PUDs.Jonas: Evictions are not going to go well.Samantha: I know it's hard.swyx: They're so hard. Get it wrong.It's okay. Just, yeah.Jonas: One other plug that may be interesting that I feel like we touched on but haven't talked a ton about is a thing that the kind of these new interfaces and this parallelism enables is the ability to hop back and forth between threads really quickly. And so a thing that we have,swyx: you wanna show something or,Jonas: yeah, I can show something.A thing that we have felt with local agents is this pain around contact switching. And you have one agent that went off and did some work and another agent that, that did something else. And so here by having, I just have three tabs open, let's say, but I can very quickly, hop in here.This is an example I showed earlier, but the actual workflow here I think is really different in a way that may not be obvious, where, I start t
On today's episode Jerry joins PFT, Big T and Arian to discuss a conspiracy theory claiming that the world could lose 7 seconds of gravity. People are saying the reason for this anomaly is because of the intersection of two gravitational waves from black holes, predicted in 2019 with a probability of 94.7%. In addition, the guys get into Jerry's new computer, Venezuela and the Polymarket, college football and NIL deals, NFL coaching searches and much more. Enjoy! (00:01:10) Jerry's New Computer (00:17:35) Polymarket (00:21:40) College Football (00:33:22) Mike Tomlin & NFL Coaches (00:56:35) Donald Trump (01:05:06) Massive Power Outage & Losing Gravity (01:19:40) Ebo NoahYou can find every episode of this show on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or YouTube. Prime Members can listen ad-free on Amazon Music. For more, visit barstool.link/macrodosing
PREVIEW FOR LATER TODAY ICE CAPS MAY SHIELD LIQUID LAKES ON MARS Colleague Bob Zimmerman. Bob Zimmerman reviews a new computer model suggesting that liquid water lakes could survive on Mars if protected by a cap of ice. While surface water usually sublimates in the thin atmosphere, this ice barrier might explain the existence of Martian geological water features.1917
STS Podcast Clips: https://youtube.com/@STSclips69?si=P9EymHBq5ORzJU8L----------------------------------------------------------------------ParunBelHomme: https://youtube.com/@parunbelhomme?si=Px9GujhDPbCgvKV_----------------------------------------------------------------------J_C_Hunt: https://youtube.com/@j_c_hunt?si=djJt8PPbTAIhTXUS----------------------------------------------------------------------Inside Parallax IG: https://www.instagram.com/inside_parallax?igsh=dXp6aTN1bTZnMHhj----------------------------------------------------------------------Discord: https://discord.gg/jtF8NV3R----------------------------------------------------------------------Hoodlum_Actual IG: https://instagram.com/hoodlum_actual?igshid=MmVlMjlkMTBhMg==---------------------------------------------------------------------Other IG: https://www.instagram.com/sts_hoodlum_actual?igsh=aGo0cGZwMWRvdnps———————————————————----------------------------Adam's post nuke NEW IG: https://www.instagram.com/slvrtacofrommi?igsh=MXE0Y3k2bXNzNndrNA==----------------------------------------------------------------------Other IG: https://www.instagram.com/sts.adam?igsh=MW1tazVhZTZtMnlmNA==---------------------------------------------------------------------Chris IG: https://www.instagram.com/sts.chris1?igsh=aWUzbTk4Z2g3b2pp
This ‘digital brain' could soon simulate ethically forbidden experiments Contact the Show: coolstuffdailypodcast@gmail.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
BEST OF - The latest on the fallout from Jimmy Kimmel's suspension from ABC, listener reaction to Ryan's take on FCC chairman's comments ahead of the suspension, National Correspondent Rory O'Neill reports on the Kimmel controversy, and Meta unveils its new “computer glasses.”
BEST OF - The latest on the fallout from Jimmy Kimmel’s suspension from ABC, listener reaction to Ryan’s take on FCC chairman’s comments ahead of the suspension, National Correspondent Rory O’Neill reports on the Kimmel controversy, and Meta unveils its new “computer glasses.” See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2/8. Professor Eric Cline's work explains that the 1177 BC collapse resulted from a "perfect storm" of drought, famine, Sea Peoples (invaders/migrants), disease, and earthquakes. New computer modeling, detailed in his research, concluded that the simultaneous fall of the Hittites and the port city of Ugarit was critical and sufficient to bring down the entire globalized network. Ugarit, a key trading nexus, faced an earthquake, drought, famine, and an unnamed invader, making it a "poster child" for the collapse.
The second episode of Fargo mostly lingers on how we got here and how we are not going to solve this pretty easy ass crime. We do meet two new Guys and a grocery magnate. We talk about: New Computer, Peak, Luke Loses At Netrunner, Deltarune, Ms Ashley Goes To Washington, Blue Prince, Final Fantasy MTG, First Fursona, Signing, Two Wakes, Pacing, Mail Convo, Subtly Is For Cowards, Molly Predicts The Season, Dog Cop, Neighbor Striptease, Billy Bob Doppleganger, Broken People ASMR, Piss Jar, Overwrought Speeches, Supermarkets,
Episode 516: 28 Years Later Review – Tyler starts off the episode by discussing the new horror film Marshmallow! Pat shares his thoughts on the new Netflix series Dept Q. Tyler leads the discussion of the latest “Nerd News”...including The Toxic Avenger trailer! The Nerds review the new “zombie” film 28 Years Later! They end the episode with a “Nerd Favorite”...how you feeling about the crop of 2025 films (so far)? Timestamps: What we are Into: 8:36-32:47 Nerd News: 32:47-38:44 28 Years Later Review: 38:44-1:09 Nerd Favorite: 1:09
After 9-1/2 years, host Brandon Starr gets a new computer, and this is its test run!
We want to hear from you, Send us a TextOur first episode back after Easter break starts off with a bang. New Computer for the studio but some hiccups along the way. In this episode we talk about corporations that have owned Jeep throughout the years. Is Jeep a curse leading to failure or a blessing that breaths a little extra life into companies on life support? You be the judge, we bring the facts. Let us know your thoughts!! Support the showThanks for listening, give us a review and check us out on YouTube -SFJ4x4 and visit our website to grab some great gear or products for your Jeep, SFJ4x4.com. Don't forget, you can email Jeffc@sfj4x4.com for special content requests, blind react videos, suggestions, special guests, or general questions. Check out our Patreon patreon.com/ISpeakJeep
Ah that new fresh feeling of a laptop, tablet or phone that comes right out of the box. 20 minutes later, you have 8000 files from your old device added onto it.In this podcast, Tom Ossa reboots Work Smarter, Not Harder - to show the importance of keeping your new devices as clean from the past as possible - within reason.
Ian and Aaron discuss Ian's trip to PHP x NYC, Aaron's new art, how to try to thrive if you think a recession is coming, and so much more.Sponsored by Bento and WorkOS.Interested in sponsoring Mostly Technical? Head to https://mostlytechnical.com/sponsor to learn more.(00:00) - A Billionaire Sighting (06:22) - PHP × NYC (14:25) - Follow Up (18:28) - Aaron's Art (27:51) - Ian's New Computer (39:34) - Screencasting.com (45:23) - Adapting to a Recession (01:03:20) - Conference Talk Links:Jerry JonesMansion on Turtle CreekThe NannyT. Boone PickensThe First Billion Is the Hardest (Book)RosieAaron's ArtLazarus of BethanyStage Manager (macOS)Marshall HaasDave RamseyKent C. DoddsEpic Web Conference 2025MicroConf
This week: Jon's new computer arrives, and Tyler has a bone to pick with the Samurai.CHAPTERS:(00:00:12) Social Media Shops(00:07:55) Karma(00:25:52) Marvel's Trajectory(00:52:13) A New Computer(00:54:00) Assassin's Creed Shadows(01:00:35) Upcoming GamesSUBSCRIBE:Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Overcast | Pocket Casts This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.couchcompany.games
In this episode, we sit down with Larry Wyn from CS for Michigan to break down the key requirements of House Bill 5649, discuss staffing and training solutions, explore budget-friendly curriculum options, and highlight best practices. If you're an administrator looking for practical steps to ensure compliance and create meaningful computer science opportunities for students, this conversation is a must-listen!
Our remote audio engineer tried to talk George through it, but we shall see.
Michael Schratt (private pilot/military aerospace historian) has lectured across the country on the unique subject of "Mystery Aircraft", and classified propulsion systems buried deep within the military-industrial complex.Over time, Michael has developed several contacts who have first-hand experience dealing with classified “black programs”, including former USAF pilots, retired Naval personnel, and aerospace engineers that have maintained a TOP SECRET SCI (Sensitive Compartmented Information) clearance."The goal of this channel is to preserve a very important part of UAP history through the use of drawings, sketches, illustrations, and full-color renderings. All cases presented here will include references so that they can be independently verified." - Michael Schratt#michaelschratt #uap #unidentifiedLinksDark Files Bookbit.ly/SchrattDarkFilesFacebookfacebook.com/profile.php?id=61554794189745Xtwitter.com/SchrattOfficialWebsiteprojectblueroom.com/michael-schrattChannel detailswww.youtube.com/@michaelschrattofficialSupport the Typical Skeptic podcast:(In need of New Computer, Mic, Camera)✰show support for the Typical skeptic podcast https://paypal.me/typicalskepticmedia cashapp $kalil1121 venmo @robert-kalil or buy me a coffee at https://buymeacoffee.com/typicalskeptic
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Gina's Youtube:https://www.youtube.com/@GinaVirginiaCasellaFacebookginavirginiacasella.eo.page/dragondreamsDragon Dreams Seriesamazon.ca/s?k=dragon dreams gina virginia casellaCooking With Gina! $$$donate.stripe.com/3cscPMf3x2rIaVa3cfDreaming With Gemstone Gina:ginavirginiacasella.eo.page/dreamingwithgemstoneginaPM me online 3h healing $1,500facebook.com/profile.php?id=61561964257884Dragon Dreams Soul Tribe $$$donate.stripe.com/bIY5nk08D9UagfufZ2Buy Me a Coffeebuymeacoffee.com/ginavirginiacasellaTypical Skeptic Podcast Links:(In need of New Computer, Mic, Camera)✰show support for the Typical skeptic podcast https://paypal.me/typicalskepticmedia cashapp $kalil1121 venmo @robert-kalil or buy me a coffee at https://buymeacoffee.com/typicalskeptic
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Visit Sean's Site:https://psionicleague.com/Sean's Youtube:https://www.youtube.com/@SilverCordSpiritualScienceTypical Skeptic Podcast Links:(In need of New Computer, Mic, Camera)✰show support for the Typical skeptic podcast https://paypal.me/typicalskepticmedia cashapp $kalil1121 venmo @robert-kalil or buy me a coffee at https://buymeacoffee.com/typicalskeptic
Rainetta's website:BlacksonRise.comRainetta Rumble:https://rumble.com/c/Blacksonrise007https://www.youtube.com/@RainettaJonesJames rink Super Solider Talk:https://www.youtube.com/@SuperSoldierTalkJames Rink Super Soldier Talk Rumble:https://rumble.com/user/supersoldiertalk/livestreamsThe content presented on The Typical Skeptic Podcast is for informational and entertainment purposes only. The views, opinions, and ideas expressed by the host(s) and guest(s) are their own and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of the channel owner.The information provided is not intended to substitute for professional advice, including but not limited to medical, legal, or financial advice. Always do your own research and consult a professional before making any decisions based on the content of the podcast.We do not claim to be experts on the topics discussed and encourage viewers to approach all information with critical thinking and skepticism. The content on this channel may include personal beliefs, speculative discussions, or controversial subjects.By watching or listening to the podcast, you agree to not hold the host(s) or any associated parties liable for any damages or consequences related to the use of the information shared.Typical Skeptic Podcast Links:(In need of New Computer, Mic, Camera)✰show support for the Typical skeptic podcast https://paypal.me/typicalskepticmedia cashapp $kalil1121 venmo @robert-kalil or buy me a coffee at https://buymeacoffee.com/typicalskeptic
Penny Bradley Penny Bradley Odysee:https://odysee.com/@NachtWaffenPilot:e/PENNY-BRADLEY---THE-TRIAL-OF-BAPHOMET-AT-THE-GALACTIC-COURT:fPenny Bradley Rumble:https://rumble.com/c/c-1533005The content presented on The Typical Skeptic Podcast is for informational and entertainment purposes only. The views, opinions, and ideas expressed by the host(s) and guest(s) are their own and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of the channel owner.The information provided is not intended to substitute for professional advice, including but not limited to medical, legal, or financial advice. Always do your own research and consult a professional before making any decisions based on the content of the podcast.We do not claim to be experts on the topics discussed and encourage viewers to approach all information with critical thinking and skepticism. The content on this channel may include personal beliefs, speculative discussions, or controversial subjects.By watching or listening to the podcast, you agree to not hold the host(s) or any associated parties liable for any damages or consequences related to the use of the information shared.Typical Skeptic Podcast Links:(In need of New Computer, Mic, Camera)✰show support for the Typical skeptic podcast https://paypal.me/typicalskepticmedia cashapp $kalil1121 venmo @robert-kalil or buy me a coffee at https://buymeacoffee.com/typicalskeptic
Penny Bradley Odysee:Penny Bradley Odysee:https://odysee.com/@NachtWaffenPilot:e/PENNY-BRADLEY---THE-TRIAL-OF-BAPHOMET-AT-THE-GALACTIC-COURT:fPenny Bradley Rumble:https://rumble.com/c/c-1533005The content presented on The Typical Skeptic Podcast is for informational and entertainment purposes only. The views, opinions, and ideas expressed by the host(s) and guest(s) are their own and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of the channel owner.The information provided is not intended to substitute for professional advice, including but not limited to medical, legal, or financial advice. Always do your own research and consult a professional before making any decisions based on the content of the podcast.We do not claim to be experts on the topics discussed and encourage viewers to approach all information with critical thinking and skepticism. The content on this channel may include personal beliefs, speculative discussions, or controversial subjects.By watching or listening to the podcast, you agree to not hold the host(s) or any associated parties liable for any damages or consequences related to the use of the information shared.Typical Skeptic Podcast Links:(In need of New Computer, Mic, Camera)✰show support for the Typical skeptic podcast https://paypal.me/typicalskepticmedia cashapp $kalil1121 venmo @robert-kalil or buy me a coffee at https://buymeacoffee.com/typicalskeptic
FOLLOW JERMAINE ON HIS TELEGRAM GROUP THE CONSCIOUSNESS WARhttps://t.me/orionblackleagueThe content presented on The Typical Skeptic Podcast is for informational and entertainment purposes only. The views, opinions, and ideas expressed by the host(s) and guest(s) are their own and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of the channel owner.The information provided is not intended to substitute for professional advice, including but not limited to medical, legal, or financial advice. Always do your own research and consult a professional before making any decisions based on the content of the podcast.We do not claim to be experts on the topics discussed and encourage viewers to approach all information with critical thinking and skepticism. The content on this channel may include personal beliefs, speculative discussions, or controversial subjects.By watching or listening to the podcast, you agree to not hold the host(s) or any associated parties liable for any damages or consequences related to the use of the information shared.(In need of New Computer, Mic, Camera)✰show support for the Typical skeptic podcast https://paypal.me/typicalskepticmedia cashapp $kalil1121 venmo @robert-kalil or buy me a coffee at https://buymeacoffee.com/typicalskeptic
The content presented on The Typical Skeptic Podcast is for informational and entertainment purposes only. The views, opinions, and ideas expressed by the host(s) and guest(s) are their own and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of the channel owner.The information provided is not intended to substitute for professional advice, including but not limited to medical, legal, or financial advice. Always do your own research and consult a professional before making any decisions based on the content of the podcast.We do not claim to be experts on the topics discussed and encourage viewers to approach all information with critical thinking and skepticism. The content on this channel may include personal beliefs, speculative discussions, or controversial subjects.By watching or listening to the podcast, you agree to not hold the host(s) or any associated parties liable for any damages or consequences related to the use of the information shared.On August 3rd, 1977 the 95th U.S. Congress opened hearings into the reported abuses concerning the CIA's TOP SECRET mind control research program code named MK-Ultra. On February 8th, 1988, a top-level MK-Ultra victim, Cathy O'Brien, was covertly rescued from her mind control enslavement by Intelligence insider Mark Phillips. Their seven year pursuit of Justice was stopped FOR REASONS OF NATIONAL SECURITY. TRANCE Formation of America exposes the truth behind this covert government program and its ultimate goal: psychological control of a nation.Trance Formation of AmericaTRANCE Formation of America is the first documented autobiography of a victim of government mind control. Cathy O'Brien is a healed and vocal survivor of the Central Intelligence Agency's MK-Ultra Project Monarch operation.Tracing her path from child pornography and recruitment into the program to serving as a top-level intelligence agent and White House sex slave, TRANCE Formation of America is a definitive eye-witness account of government corruption that implicates some of the most prominent figures in U.S. politics.Cathy O Brien Website:https://trance-formation.com/Cathy O Brien Instagram and X@realCathyObrienNathan Ciszek and Arkheim Ra on Virtual Temple Complex Showwww.youtube.com/@disclosureknownNathan Ciszek Instagram @nathanciszekArkheim Ra Instagram @Arkheim_RaTypical Skeptic Podcast Links:(In need of New Computer, Mic, Camera)✰show support for the Typical skeptic podcast https://paypal.me/typicalskepticmedia cashapp $kalil1121 venmo @robert-kalil or buy me a coffee at https://buymeacoffee.com/typicalskeptic
Tony Rodrigues is a 20 year tour experiencer, author of the autobiography Ceres Colony Cavalier, and co-creator of “Talks with Tony,” a Patreon Group focused on Disclosure and consciousness expansion. He Hosts support groups & has created a course for others who suspect they may have been involved in similar programs. His website is: www.tonyrodrigues.com Tony Rodrigues was involved in covert psycho-energetics programs as a young boy, where he was subjected to advanced experiments in remote viewing, consciousness expansion, possibly allowing his memory recall. These classified projects pushed the boundaries of human capabilities, using extreme and often traumatic methods to unlock psychic abilities. In "Beyond Sight: The Hidden History of Remote Viewing and Psycho Energetics," Tony discloses the advanced possibilities of the human mind, sharing his personal experiences and the knowledge he gained from these programs. Through his work, Tony aims to shed light on the hidden potential within us all and the profound impact of Psycho Energetics.The content presented on The Typical Skeptic Podcast is for informational and entertainment purposes only. The views, opinions, and ideas expressed by the host(s) and guest(s) are their own and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of the channel owner.The information provided is not intended to substitute for professional advice, including but not limited to medical, legal, or financial advice. Always do your own research and consult a professional before making any decisions based on the content of the podcast.We do not claim to be experts on the topics discussed and encourage viewers to approach all information with critical thinking and skepticism. The content on this channel may include personal beliefs, speculative discussions, or controversial subjects.By watching or listening to the podcast, you agree to not hold the host(s) or any associated parties liable for any damages or consequences related to the use of the information shared.Typical Skeptic Podcast Links:(In need of New Computer, Mic, Camera)✰show support for the Typical skeptic podcast https://paypal.me/typicalskepticmedia cashapp $kalil1121 venmo @robert-kalil or buy me a coffee at https://buymeacoffee.com/typicalskeptic
Rion's Webstite - TeamLight.Com Rion's Youtube - / @unitethecollective Team Light Products: https://teamlightstore.comAscension and Expansion for Gaia and All of HumanityTypical Skeptic Podcast Links: (In need of New Computer, Mic, Camera) ✰show support for the Typical skeptic podcast https://paypal.me/typicalskepticmedia cashapp $kalil1121 venmo @robert-kalil or buy me a coffee at https://buymeacoffee.com/typicalskeptic
Tony Rodrigues is a 20 year tour experiencer, author of the autobiography Ceres Colony Cavalier and its sequel, Project starmaker. He Hosts Weekly meetups through “Talks with Tony,” a Patreon Group focused on Disclosure, consciousness expansion, and remote viewing. has created a Memory recall course for others who suspect they may have been involved in similar programs. Tony's website:
The content presented on The Typical Skeptic Podcast is for informational and entertainment purposes only. The views, opinions, and ideas expressed by the host(s) and guest(s) are their own and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of the channel owner.The information provided is not intended to substitute for professional advice, including but not limited to medical, legal, or financial advice. Always do your own research and consult a professional before making any decisions based on the content of the podcast.We do not claim to be experts on the topics discussed and encourage viewers to approach all information with critical thinking and skepticism. The content on this channel may include personal beliefs, speculative discussions, or controversial subjects.By watching or listening to the podcast, you agree to not hold the host(s) or any associated parties liable for any damages or consequences related to the use of the information shared.book a reading with PInk Bella:WEBSITE - https://alohapinkbella.weebly.com/EMAIL - alohapinkbella@gmail.comPink Bella Aloha - specializes in:* Deep Dives into Akashic & Galactic Akashic Records for CLARITY / SOUL MISSION & Guidance - Clearing Personal & Ancestral Contracts, Patterns & Karmic Loops* Ascension Wayshower to Prepare Starseeds, Lightworkers & the 144000for 5D New Earth* Higher Self Liaison* Quantum MultiDimensional Healer incl 12-22 Chakras & Meridian Systems* Starseed Origins & Galactic Councils of Light TransmissionsPINK BELLA ALOHA THERAPY SOCIAL MEDIA LINKSYOUTUBE - https://www.youtube.com/alohapinkbella888TELEGRAM - https://t.me/alohapinkbellaRUMBLE - https://rumble.com/user/AlohaPinkBella888INSTAGRAM - https://www.instagram.com/pinkbella_alohatherapy/PINK BELLA ALOHA FACEBOOK PAGE - https://www.facebook.com/alohapinkbellaSTARSEEDS NEW EARTH FACEBOOK PAGE - https://www.facebook.com/newearthlove888TIK TOK - https://www.tiktok.com/@alohapinkbellaSPOTIFY PODCAST: - COSMIC STARLIGHT PODCASThttps://open.spotify.com/episode/65myGaghP14VWdbRgNwhbw?si=eff6c052568949feOFFICE HOURS until DEC 22,2024ZOOM CALLS - TUES-THURSFALL HRS - Email for Special Requests1ST CALL 10AM PST - LAST CALL 2PM PST(Accepting Special Requests)- EVENING CALLS FOR EUROPE/UK - TUES/THURSAUSTRALIA/NZ /CHINA / JAPAN - Please Email before booking Zoom Calls **DISTANCE HEALING - TUES - THURSEVENINGS APROX 10PM YOUR TIME ZONE** OFFICE CLOSED BY 3PM PST / 6PM EST ***** SESSION BOOKING & PAYPAL REFUND POLICY 2024***~ALL SESSIONS ARE PREPAY & NON-REFUNDABLE - THIS RESERVES YOUR SESSION TIME/DAY ~~ HOWEVER YOU HAVE AN OPTION TO RESCHEDULE ONCE or RECEIVE AN eGIFT card to use the same Calendar Year ** 48 HOURS NOTICE VIA EMAIL IS REQUIRED FOR YOUR RESCHEDULE OR eGIFT Card - Mahalo!(In need of New Computer, Mic, Camera)✰show support for the Typical skeptic podcast https://paypal.me/typicalskepticmedia cashapp $kalil1121 venmo @robert-kalil or buy me a coffee at https://buymeacoffee.com/typicalskeptic
Growing Up Alien Youtube:https://www.youtube.com/@GrowingupAlienThe content presented on The Typical Skeptic Podcast is for informational and entertainment purposes only. The views, opinions, and ideas expressed by the host(s) and guest(s) are their own and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of the channel owner.The information provided is not intended to substitute for professional advice, including but not limited to medical, legal, or financial advice. Always do your own research and consult a professional before making any decisions based on the content of the podcast.We do not claim to be experts on the topics discussed and encourage viewers to approach all information with critical thinking and skepticism. The content on this channel may include personal beliefs, speculative discussions, or controversial subjects.By watching or listening to the podcast, you agree to not hold the host(s) or any associated parties liable for any damages or consequences related to the use of the information shared.(In need of New Computer, Mic, Camera)✰show support for the Typical skeptic podcast https://paypal.me/typicalskepticmedia cashapp $kalil1121 venmo @robert-kalil or buy me a coffee at https://buymeacoffee.com/typicalskeptic
Send us a textIn this episode of Sidecar Sync, hosts Amith and Mallory dive deep into two groundbreaking AI innovations—HeyGen's interactive avatars and Claude's new computer use feature. They explore how these tools could revolutionize the way associations handle meetings, customer interactions, and even website management. With live examples and hands-on experiences, they assess the future of AI avatars in the business world and break down how Claude's ability to control a computer can streamline tasks. Tune in to hear how these advancements could transform your association's operations and member experience.digitalNow Conference 2024
Listen to the latest System76 updates including Halloween sales on laptops and desktops, the release of the second alpha of Cosmic and the introduction of the Thelio Astra, an arm-based desktop catering to autonomous vehicle and software-defined vehicle developers. Interviews with Joe Speed from Ampere and System76's Mechanical Engineer Britain and Product Manager Tony explore the technical specifications, engineering excellence, and collaborative efforts behind the Thelio Astra.03:15 Halloween sale04:08 COSMIC Desktop update05:40 New Thelio Astra arm-powered desktop07:26 Interview with Joe Speed from Ampere08:08 Joe Speed talks grassroots community09:35 Working with arm and Ampere11:48 Comparing Thelio Astra to other machines16:25 Astra as a Pre built arm desktop solution17:30 Tier IV using Ampere desktops20:58 Value in native development25:05 Running tests in parallel28:35 Britain and Tony from System76 talk about Thelio Astra's engineering29:30 Energy efficiency of Thelio Astra31:07 Britain discusses thermals32:00 Multi-threaded tasks34:50 Cooling Ampere CPUs
John shares some of his frustrations with changing computers.
A new modeling tool may help emergency officials better predict how wildland fires move through communities. Also, Shasta County reported its first human case of West Nile Virus this year, and an effort to preserve the historic El Rey Theater in Downtown Chico is in full swing.
Welcome Back to the Ba'al Busters Community. M-F 8am - 10am Pacific on FTJMedia.com and Rumble (and that god forsaken Twitter as @DisguiseLimits)Today, 8.28.2024, WE the Ba'al Busters People are joined by Duane Hayes of https://BulletproofPub.com, and likely by the Wireless Body Area Network (WBAN), but that's a separate issue all together.I turn 45 at about 8:20pm Pacific, today. If you forgot to get me a card, no worries.THIS CHANNEL IS INDEPENDENT And Requires VIEWER SUPPORT to CONTINUE!GO TO: https://GiveSendGo.com/BaalBustersMake the New Computer campaign a Success!Got Books? Ones that tell you real history are found here:https://www.moneytreepublishing.com/shop USE code: BAAL for 10% OFF your entire order.Go to https://SemperFryLLC.com to get all the AWESOME stuff I make!DR PETER GLIDDEN, ND All-Access Membershiphttps://leavebigpharmabehind.com/?via=pgndhealthUse Code HealthyWealthyWise for 50% OFF. Only 4 DAYS Left!GET COMMERCIAL FREE VIDEOS/PODCASTS and Exclusive Content: Become a Patron. https://Patreon.com/DisguisetheLimitsMy Clean Source Creatine-HCL Use Coupon Code FANFAVORITE for 5% Offhttps://www.semperfryllc.com/store/p126/CreatineHCL.htmlAmazon version of Priestcraft: Beyond Babylon 8.5x11 Paperback, Hardcover, & Kindle: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0CNGX53L7/Barnes & Noble: Priestcraft: Beyond Babylon 416 pages, and ebook: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/book/1144402176KOBO: https://www.kobo.com/us/en/ebook/priestcraft-beyond-babylonAWESOME Hot Sauce: https://SemperFryLLC.com Use Code at site for 5% Off qualified purchases (over $22) I handcraft over 30 varieties of Award Winning Artisan, fresh, micro-batch hot sauces. Veteran Owned!Before they shut down comms, Subscribe at:https://FTJMedia.com/channel/BaalBustersBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/ba-al-busters-broadcast--5100262/support.
REMINDER: Reggie and Marques will be off August 19-23, attending a podcast conference. They'll be back with episodes beginning Monday, August 26. A new computer interface could give those suffering from ALS their voice back. Plus, scientists look to implement a universal lunar clock to keep tabs on time on the moon. A runaway star that's faster than anything we've ever heard of. And on TDIH; William Beebe descends into the ocean depths in his bathysphere. New brain-computer interface allows man with ALS to 'speak' again International astronomy group joins calls for a lunar clock to keep time on the moon 'Failed star' brown dwarf runaway races through the cosmos at 1 million mph August 15, 1934: World-Record Dive in the Bathysphere by Barton and Beebe The first Bathysphere and the work of William Beebe William Beebe: Britannica VIDEO: Sketches from the Deep Contact the show - coolstuffcommute@gmail.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
You can take the internal hard disk of an old computer and install it as an additional drive in a new one, or consider a more flexible alternative.
Also in the news: Antisemitic flyers found placed in cars in Bucktown; State election clerks say former President Trump's name will stay on next month's Illinois primary ballot; Today is Leap Day! and more.
Also in the news: Antisemitic flyers found placed in cars in Bucktown; State election clerks say former President Trump's name will stay on next month's Illinois primary ballot; Today is Leap Day! and more.
Today on the show, Steven and Shaun discuss an email from listener Jonathon who got in touch to ask about upgrading his computer. The guys get into an in-depth discussion about the options available and what blind people should consider. Also, there's a chance to learn about the work of RetinaScope following Steven's trip to the Consumer Electronics Show in Amsterdam. And there are rumours of new iPads and even a new Apple Pencil. But are those rumours right? Get in touch with the Double Tappers and join the conversation: Email: feedback@doubletaponair.com Call: 1-877-803-4567 (Canada and USA) / 0204 571 3354 (UK) X (formerly Twitter): @BlindGuyTech / @ShaunShed Mastodon: @DoubleTap
Benjamin Palmer, the visionary Co-Founder and CEO of The New Computer Corporation, is a prominent figure in Los Angeles, renowned for pioneering digital innovation. With a remarkable career spanning diverse domains, he leads the charge at a Web3 product studio, The New Computer Corporation, while also contributing as an Executive Producer Council member at UCLA's Center for the Art of Performance. Join us for the 9th episode of our FWB x Ledger collaboration as we talk with Ben about his journey through digital marketing and into the world of Web3, building creative experiences in Web3, how the 'attention economy' will evolve, and much more. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
MEP EP#369: The Yeti Job HuntNewsMay the Fab be with YouShow off the new factory!Star Wars theme of courseContest for best Star Wars CostumeFood and DrinkPossible Cantina Band?The State of Electrical Engineering JobsDenver IndustriesMedicalAviationSpaceCommunicationsManufacturingCommonalitiesDesign - HardwareDesign - FirmwareBoard stuffCad/Cam and mechanicalRegulationsMost stuffSecret clearanceRepairManufacturing practicesKnowledgeHigh speed electronicsRFCommunication protocols - Some board level stuff but lots of ethernetFollow up from last weekWhat happened last week?New Computer? Ordered a caseSliger CX4200i Building a new rack for this
Do you need to buy a new computer to learn the programs for corporate instructional design work? The short answer: no! But you do need to ensure your computer has the appropriate specs to set you up for success when you're first learning and beyond.In this episode, I'm reviewing the computer requirements for corporate ID work. I'll share what computer systems and specs you need while learning instructional design and eLearning development and what happens after you secure a job or contract. Top reasons to listen to the entire episode:Learn which operating system is required for running the core corporate ID programsDiscover the ideal specs for both Windows and Mac computers, and if you need a laptop or a desktopUnderstand what is provided (or not provided) to you as an employee, W-2 contractor, and 10-99 contractorFull Show Notes Here!Resources and Links Mentioned: Sign up for the Applied Instructional Design AcademyListen to Software Programs You Need to Learn to Get an ID JobListen to Full-Time vs. Contract Instructional Design WorkConnect with Jill Instagram Jumpstart Your Instructional Design Career Facebook Group LinkedIn WebsiteThanks for joining us on the Jumpstart Your Instructional Design Career podcast! If you enjoyed this episode, please leave us a rating and review to help us reach even more freedom seekers and aspiring instructional designers.
Transcripts and FAQs: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1qG1rvNaTFbjtVlYt7x5RxtUT3fFpuHfN_KAmpVuONsw The YouTooCanLearnThai website has not been maintained since late 2022. *** Unlock exclusive & ad-free episodes: Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/youtoocanlearnthai/ (recommended for listeners in Thailand) Anchor/Spotify: https://anchor.fm/learnthai/subscribe (recommended for listeners in USA, UK and 30+ available countries) Detailed tutorial: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1n-tZKW76sT7ULyvOVdH7_3NcPpbWmXRAzIZp7T0_rUM *** Books: https://viewauthor.at/khrunan (Thai alphabet and activity books) Free audio flashcards for basic Thai vocabulary: https://quizlet.com/youtoocanlearnthai *** Merch (t-shirts and phone grips): USA: https://www.amazon.com/hz/wishlist/ls/1EZF44ILW1L5N UK: https://www.amazon.co.uk/hz/wishlist/ls/14ESIQA0SZ5LL Germany: https://www.amazon.de/hz/wishlist/ls/219DDRPHY347Y *** Facebook: www.facebook.com/youtoocanlearnthai YouTube: www.youtube.com/c/YoutoocanlearnThai *** เมื่อเดือนที่แล้ว แนนซื้อโต๊ะทำงานใหม่ที่บ้านค่ะ ในอดีต โต๊ะทำงานของแนนไม่ใหญ่มาก วางจอคอมพิวเตอร์ได้หนึ่งจอ มีพื้นที่สำหรับคีย์บอร์ดกับเมาส์ แล้วก็มีพื้นที่อีกนิดหน่อยสำหรับวางสมุดและหนังสือค่ะ ดังนั้น เวลามีสมุดและหนังสือเยอะ แนนก็จะรู้สึกว่าพื้นที่บนโต๊ะไม่ค่อยพอค่ะ แนนคิดว่า การมีพื้นที่บนโต๊ะมากขึ้น น่าจะช่วยให้ทำงานมีประสิทธิภาพมากขึ้น ก็เลยซื้อโต๊ะทำงานที่ใหญ่ขึ้นค่ะ แล้วก็ เนื่องจากการนั่งหน้าคอมพิวเตอร์นาน ๆ ไม่ดีต่อสุขภาพ แนนก็เลยเลือกโต๊ะที่ปรับความสูงได้ สามารถนั่งทำงานก็ได้ ยืนทำงานก็ได้ค่ะ *** เมื่อ เดือน ที่ แล้ว แนน ซื้อ โต๊ะ ทำงาน ใหม่ ที่ บ้าน ค่ะ ใน อดีต โต๊ะ ทำ งาน ของ แนน ไม่ ใหญ่ มาก วาง จอ คอมพิวเตอร์ ได้ หนึ่ง จอ มี พื้นที่ สำหรับ คีย์บอร์ด กับ เมาส์ แล้ว ก็ มี พื้นที่ อีก นิด หน่อย สำหรับ วาง สมุด และ หนังสือ ค่ะ ดังนั้น เวลา มี สมุด และ หนังสือ เยอะ แนน ก็ จะ รู้สึก ว่า พื้นที่ บน โต๊ะ ไม่ ค่อย พอ ค่ะ แนน คิด ว่า การ มี พื้นที่ บน โต๊ะ มาก ขึ้น น่า จะ ช่วย ให้ ทำงาน มี ประสิทธิภาพ มาก ขึ้น ก็ เลย ซื้อ โต๊ะ ทำงาน ที่ ใหญ่ ขึ้น ค่ะ แล้ว ก็ เนื่องจาก การ นั่ง หน้า คอมพิวเตอร์ นาน ๆ ไม่ ดี ต่อ สุขภาพ แนน ก็ เลย เลือก โต๊ะ ที่ ปรับ ความ สูง ได้ สามารถ นั่ง ทำงาน ก็ ได้ ยืน ทำงาน ก็ ได้ ค่ะ
Join Ben & Billy for Episode 1136! Tonight, we'll take a look at Baked Alaska's Federal conviction, the KingCobraJFS deep fried ribs trilogy, AND MORE! New PC Fundraiser: https://drunkenpeasants.betterworld.org/campaigns/help-drunken-peasants-get-new-co Support our audio feed to get EXTRA content: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-drunken-peasants-podcast/id1013248653https://open.spotify.com/show/6eulbMV0APnJ5yNR8Jc3IMhttps://bit.ly/SticherDrunkenPeasants Streamlabs Link: https://streamlabs.com/drunkenpeasants/tip *Google Calendar* https://calendar.google.com/calendar/embed?src=sund2qrenq20a2d5802cpp9i6k%40group.calendar.google.com&ctz=America%2FLos_Angeles*iCal* https://calendar.google.com/calendar/ical/sund2qrenq20a2d5802cpp9i6k%40group.calendar.google.com/public/basic.icsIntegrate into your Calendar: http://bit.ly/DPTAPCalendar SUPPORT US: https://patreon.com/DPhttps://bit.ly/BraveAppDPhttps://bit.ly/BenBillyMerchhttps://streamlabs.com/drunkenpeasantshttps://youtube.com/DrunkenPeasants/joinhttps://subscribestar.com/DrunkenPeasantsPODSURVEY: https://podsurvey.com/peasants SOCIAL MEDIA:https://discord.gg/2fnWTbEhttps://fb.com/DrunkenPeasantshttps://twitch.tv/DrunkenPeasantshttps://twitter.com/DrunkenPeasantshttps://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-drunken-peasants-podcast/id1013248653https://open.spotify.com/show/6eulbMV0APnJ5yNR8Jc3IMhttps://bit.ly/SticherDrunkenPeasantshttps://bit.ly/DPUndergroundhttp://bit.ly/DPTAPCalendar BEN: https://bit.ly/BenpaiYT BILLY THE FRIDGE: https://youtube.com/Overweighthttps://twitter.com/BillyTheFridgehttps://instagram.com/BillyTheFridge PO BOX:The Drunken Peasants1100 Bellevue Way NESte 8A # 422Bellevue, WA 98004Be sure to put the name on the package you send as "The Drunken Peasants". If you would like to send something to a certain peasant, include a note inside the package with what goes to who. SPECIAL THANKS:https://twitter.com/GFIX_https://twitter.com/SYNJE_Grafxhttps://twitter.com/MarshalMansonhttps://berserkyd.bandcamp.comhttps://youtube.com/channel/UC9BV1g_9Iq67_yCyj5AX_4Q DISCLAIMER:The views and opinions expressed on our show by hosts, guests, or viewers, are their own and do not necessarily reflect those of Drunken Peasants.
Karen Demands a Free New Computer!Welcome to another episode of r/entitledparents stories with mr redder, formerly known as mr reddit.These r/entitled parents stories from Reddit are the top posts of all time and are the funniest Reddit stories ever posted on the entitled parents subreddit! rSlash EntitledParents stories are about funny entitled parents, but especially Karen!Listening to r/mrreddit entitled parents playlist is a great experience! These EntitledParents Top Posts of All Time from Reddit are made for you to enjoy any time, so be sure to save my rSlash entitledparents playlist to your favorites!While there are many rslash channels that read r/entitled parents stories and r/prorevenge from reddit, each narrator has their own way of performing them.Because most of my audience prefers Entitled Parents stories of Reddit, I tend to just stick with reading the r/EntitleParents Top Posts of All Time.Subscribe to Mr Redder for daily Reddit stories. I post comedy readings of Reddit posts and Reddit stories every single day! I'm greatly inspired by the top reddit posts of all time videos and reddit stories which is why I started doing them myself.