- cross-posted to:
- lobsters
- cross-posted to:
- lobsters
Many of us got hit by the agent coding addiction. It feels good, we barely sleep, we build amazing things. Every once in a while that interaction involves other humans, and all of a sudden we get a reality check that maybe we overdid it.
In His Dark Materials, every human has a dæmon, a companion that is an externally visible manifestation of their soul. It lives alongside as an animal, but it talks, thinks and acts independently. I’m starting to relate our relationship with agents that have memory to those little creatures. We become dependent on them, and separation from them is painful and takes away from our new-found identity. We’re relying on these little companions to validate us and to collaborate with. But it’s not a genuine collaboration like between humans, it’s one that is completely driven by us, and the AI is just there for the ride. We can trick it to reinforce our ideas and impulses. And we act through this AI. Some people who have not programmed before, now wield tremendous powers, but all those powers are gone when their subscription hits a rate limit and their little dæmon goes to sleep.
Looking at Gas Town (and Beads) from the outside, it looks like a Mad Max cult. What are polecats, refineries, mayors, beads, convoys doing in an agentic coding system? If the maintainer is in the loop, and the whole community is in on this mad ride, then everyone and their dæmons just throw more slop up. As an external observer the whole project looks like an insane psychosis or a complete mad art project. Except, it’s real? Or is it not? Apparently a reason for slowdown in Gas Town is contention on figuring out the version of Beads, which takes 7 subprocess spawns. Or using the doctor command times out completely. Beads keeps growing and growing in complexity and people who are using it, are realizing that it’s almost impossible to uninstall.



I get your point, but in this case the author of the article has quite a lot of public projects hosted on github and actively contributes to various organizations while claiming most of his code is written by AI now.
As the author of minijinja, he wrote a whole article about his experiences porting from rust to golang: https://lucumr.pocoo.org/2026/1/14/minijinja-go-port/
The code is here: https://github.com/mitsuhiko/minijinja/tree/main/minijinja-go
I myself used claude to create and maintain a publically available tool for tauri. To my surprise people actively use it without me advertising it even once.
What tool for Tauri?
And I’m not saying no code is done with AI. I’m sure some people use it successfully. What I’m saying is that people that achieve that are the ones that would be able to do it without AI, understand its limitations and use it as just another tool. Not the ones that treat it as religion, generate bunch of code without sleeping and preach about how great it is.
This one: https://github.com/thwbh/tauri-typegen
It generates the typescript boilerplate required to invoke tauri commands from the frontend and allows optional zod validation with graceful error handling and type coercion for runtime type safety.
Nice, I’m using leptos on front end so I don’t have type issues :)
I’m trying to migrate github workflow for my Tauri app to gitlab using claude code. I have some leftover subscription from my previous job that will expire very soon. I would also like to generate leptos client binding for all the plugins but there would still be a lot of testing involved. I don’t think I will have time for that.