The first time I had to sit down and write operating principles for two AI agents working on the same codebase, I had a moment of genuine déjà vu. It felt exactly like the early Foodora days. Too much speed, too little structure, and someone on the team absolutely certain they knew the fastest route even when the road wasn't built yet. Except this time the team is Claude and Codex. And I'm working
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The Oscars Just Banned AI from Winning Acting and Writing Awards
I travel a lot. And every single time, I'm standing in an airport Googling "do I need an adapter for Thailand" while my boarding group is already lining up. The existing tools for this are bad. They're buried in blog posts from 2016 with popup ads, or they're a wall of text that doesn't actually answer the question. I already had most of the data. My destination guides on Vientapps cover dozens of
TL;DR: I shipped image → PDF conversion but spent most of the week on SEO content instead of the planned batch UI and landing page. The numbers say that was the right call. Organic search became the #1 traffic source for the first time. Convertify is a free image converter I'm building solo: Rust + Axum + libvips on the backend, Next.js 16.2 SSG on the frontend, PostgreSQL for landing page content
Confession: I’m not a walking dictionary. If you test me on textbook IT definitions, I might fail. After transitioning through Law and Banking into Tech, I’ve realized that terminology is often just a high-tech "smoke screen" for professional ego. But for many of us, the problem is deeper: it's about the language of logic itself. In my first year of Law school, I spent nights memorizing the "Theor
We debate endlessly about whether AI will ever achieve consciousness, but we forget how consciousness actually compiled in the first place. It wasn’t spawned in a vacuum; it was forged by the brutal necessity of survival. For millions of iterations over millions of years, early cognition was nothing but pure instinct and bloodlust—refined only by the fight for the right to exist. Humanity is not
CoderLegion charges $10/month premium while running hidden ads, faking their founding date, inflating user counts by 70%, and sending bulk emails with mail merge errors. Full technical proof. Every claim verified against public record. TL;DR: CoderLegion charges $10/month for "premium" access to ~37 active writers on a free open-source script running on $5 shared hosting. They claim no ads (Goo