The Wall Street Journal ran a piece yesterday on JustPaid, a 9-person Mountain View startup. They used OpenClaw and Claude Code to stand up seven AI agents that write code, review it, and run QA around the clock. In one month: 10 major features shipped. Each one would have taken a human engineer a month or more. This story is getting passed around as proof that the autonomous engineering team is h
In Q3 2024, our 12-person platform team slashed log ingestion spend by 35% in 90 days, moving from a brittle Elasticsearch-based pipeline to a tuned Vector 0.30 and Loki 3.0 stack—without losing a single log or breaking our 99.95% SLA. GameStop makes $55.5B takeover offer for eBay (279 points) Talking to 35 Strangers at the Gym (144 points) Newton's law of gravity passes its biggest test (15
We Cut Compliance Costs by 40% Using Pulumi 3.140 and Chef 18 for Multi-Cloud AWS and GCP Modern multi-cloud environments offer unmatched flexibility, but they also introduce complex compliance challenges. For our team managing hybrid infrastructure across AWS and GCP, manual policy enforcement and fragmented tooling were driving up compliance costs by 22% year-over-year. By integrating Pulumi 3
In Q3 2024, our 12-person platform engineering team reduced confirmed security incidents by 41.7% (from 72 to 42 per quarter) after rolling out Trivy 0.50 for pre-deployment scanning and Falco 0.40 for runtime detection across 142 production microservices. We didn’t rewrite our CI/CD pipeline, we didn’t hire a dedicated security team, and we didn’t spend a dime on enterprise security tools. Here’s
I went into a bunch of OpenClaw discussions expecting the usual advice about subagents: better prompts, cleaner folders, maybe some heroic config. What I found was more interesting. The OpenClaw setups that actually seem to hold up are not just "one agent with more prompts." They are separate services with separate trust zones. The pattern that keeps showing up looks like this: a librarian agent a
E aí, gurizada! De uns tempos pra cá, eu percebi um burburinho enorme em torno de uma ferramenta que tem chamado a atenção, e não é por menos: o OpenClaw. Eu, que vivo mergulhado nesse universo de IA e automação, gravei um vídeo recentemente, que está lá no meu canal, assista no YouTube, justamente pra desmistificar essa parada. E hoje, vim aqui no Dev.to pra gente conversar um pouco mais sobre o