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One thread. Multiple AIs. Deliberation, not polling. Most people use AI like this: 🤦 Ask one model → get one answer Ask multiple models → compare results That’s not thinking. That’s polling. Not side by side. Not isolated. But in sequence — where each one reads what the previous one said before responding. Manual Council is the simplest form of that idea. No backend. No orchestration. No
If you've ever built a form backend or an automation workflow, I built MultiValidator to fix that. One API call. Up to 50 fields. Send a batch of fields, get back validation results for all of them: import requests payload = { "fields": [ {"type": "email", "value": "[email protected]", "field_name": "email"}, {"type": "phone", "value": "+447911123456", "field_name": "mobile"}
If you've ever managed multiple GitHub accounts on the same machine — a personal account, a work account, maybe a freelance client account — you know the pain. You clone a repo, push some code, and then realize it went up under the wrong username. Or worse, you spend 20 minutes debugging why your SSH key isn't working, only to find out you're using the wrong identity file. I got tired of it. So I
I started where a lot of us do: a LangChain RAG walkthrough. You chunk some text, embed it, retrieve top‑k chunks, and wire an LLM to answer questions. It clicks quickly, which is exactly why it’s easy to walk away thinking you’ve “done RAG.” What bothered me was that the demo corpus is usually tiny and artificial. I write on DEV.to about things like NLP routing and CNN image classification. If I
Updated May 2026: Now covers virtual desktop (Spaces) restoration and iCloud sync across multiple Macs, both shipped in ShiftPlus 1.3. TL;DR A complete macOS workspace includes apps, window layouts, browser profiles, virtual desktops, and terminal state. Native macOS saves almost none of it. Most third-party tools cover one slice: Stay and Spencer handle window layouts, Shift handles browser profi
In July 2025, a developer's Claude Code instance hit a recursion loop and burned through 1.67 billion tokens in 5 hours, generating an estimated $16,000 to $50,000 in API charges before anyone noticed. The agent did not crash. It did not throw an error. It just kept calling tools, getting confused, calling more tools, and silently accumulating cost. Old software crashes. LLM agents spend. This is