Selfie of me at the finish line
Beat my personal best at the ChesCo Race Fest Marathon today πππ»
Selfie of me at the finish line
Beat my personal best at the ChesCo Race Fest Marathon today πππ»
The GraphQLConf 2026 schedule is live π
May 6-7 at Meta HQ in Menlo Park. Two days of talks covering AI integration, federation, security, developer experience, and the future of the GraphQL ecosystem.
Browse the full lineup and plan your conference experience π
graphql.org/conf/2026/
Jonny knows what heβs doing
Whatβs next for @guild.host? Oh nothing π
In my YouTube thumbnail era www.youtube.com/watch?v=emZb...
The Asahi team is doing great work though, might consider putting Linux on whatever Mac I buy anyway lol
Definitely have a few Linux machines around the house, see thread! Need a new personal laptop for light use though and MacOS is my preference for that. Going back and forth between a new M5 Air, a refurb M1/M2 Air, or now the Neo.
bsky.app/profile/jeff...
MacBook Neo or Air? Sortakinda in the market
Genuinely impressed with the first few tasks I've given Claude Cowork + Connectors. In particular, it's been good at Jira, which is good because project management is such an energy drain for me π
Tomorrow!
GraphQL Hyderabad is hosting an in-person Modern AI & Database Developer Meetup focused on practical GraphQL adoption in todayβs application stack.
This meetup brings together developers exploring scalable APIs, AI-powered applications, and modern data systems β with GraphQL at the core.
You don't want to miss a stream with Jerel!
Got into a little bit of a rabbit hole installing the Broadcom drivers for the WiFi, but figured it out within a few hours. So instead of ewaste we got a revitalized light gaming/browsing machine and vibe-coding sandbox for my kid. Still enjoying tinkering even after all these years β€οΈ
It took two days of compiling before we gave up. Backed up the Minecraft saves and mods, Installed Debian + XFCE, and voila. It runs faster, gets updates, and installing Codex was trivial. We think Minecraft runs snappier on it as well.
It was worth it for a while but the forcing function was, funny enough, installing Codex. Codex wasn't the problem, but Homebrew specifically. llvm doesn't publish precompiled binaries for old macOS installations with Intel CPUs. So we had to compile it from source.
Gave new life to our old 2012 MacBook Air over the weekend. My oldest kid was basically using it as a Minecraft-playing machine that occasionally browsed the web. Since Apple dropped support for its hardware it had been without updates for a few years.
Building on this idea, dogs as an entropy source for a random number generator π€ www.calebleak.com/posts/dog-ga...
Very proud to represent Apollo in AAIF. Collaboration on core AI tech and practices is key to preserving interoperability and openness!
Clout-first disclosure
Donβt tell Claude!
I expanded on this jdauriemma.com/programming/...
Our institutional memory is limited to five years, tops. Anything is fair game to be "discovered" or "invented" anew after that, bonus points if the reboot is obviously worse
Monkey's paw**
And maybe it's because we're capable of competence, and LLMs aren't? Idk, just Friday musings on bsky
To me this has always been the promise of software, and I don't see enough energy being poured into AI doing boring, dumb things. Instead, the narrative increasingly seems to be placing the human in mundane workflows (managing AIs). That's upside-down IMO
Yeah there's a chance this is a monkey's claw type of wish. What I mean to say is that I want software to solve mundane problems so I can spend more time doing thing that are good for self-actualization (making music, spending time with family and friends, exercise)
Forget "PhD-level knowledge;" wake me up when the machines can order me a burrito and manage my calendar without being constantly corrected and babysat
I don't want Artificial Intelligence, I want Artificial Competence