🐙 DappyKit pfp

🐙 DappyKit

@dappykit

77 Following
40216 Followers


🐙 DappyKit pfp
🐙 DappyKit
@dappykit
Turned off.
0 reply
0 recast
8 reactions

🐙 DappyKit pfp
🐙 DappyKit
@dappykit
2 requests to Juicy Newsy GPT-4.5 cost me $4, while 53 requests to Claude 3.7 cost $2.12. The latter is both better quality and cheaper.
0 reply
0 recast
3 reactions

🐙 DappyKit pfp
🐙 DappyKit
@dappykit
Phrase of the day: ✨ Vibe coding
0 reply
0 recast
6 reactions

🐙 DappyKit pfp
🐙 DappyKit
@dappykit
📈
0 reply
0 recast
4 reactions

🐙 DappyKit pfp
🐙 DappyKit
@dappykit
Im not even tring to tipe corectly anymor with LLMs. Smash teh lkie buton.
0 reply
0 recast
4 reactions

🐙 DappyKit pfp
🐙 DappyKit
@dappykit
Well, there is a gap in AI-assisted development. On weekends, people usually don’t work. But during this time, AI can develop several new features at a low cost per request. For example, OpenAI offers discounts on non-urgent requests. But for this, you need Cursor, which would pull tasks from the backlog and develop them. This way, by Monday, you’d have several pull requests ready. I wonder, does anyone do this?
2 replies
0 recast
12 reactions

🐙 DappyKit pfp
🐙 DappyKit
@dappykit
Developing a project solely with Cursor—0 lines of my own code. Tested in a browser for a week, then checked on mobile—everything was broken. Gave Cursor the fix, made coffee, came back… flawless on mobile. Feels like I’ve shifted from developer to manager.
1 reply
1 recast
13 reactions

🐙 DappyKit pfp
🐙 DappyKit
@dappykit
A-ha, Anthropic recently released a replacement for Cursor: @anthropic-ai/claude-code. It’s a coding agent with Claude 3.7. A couple of differences from Cursor: it runs from the command line and burns through your money significantly faster.
0 reply
0 recast
13 reactions

🐙 DappyKit pfp
🐙 DappyKit
@dappykit
Cursor IDE lacks remote control—you must stay at your PC with no way to monitor progress from your phone. There’s no visibility on when the AI agent stops, making it hard to step away. I’m looking into Telegram control, but without an API, it requires hacks to interact with the UI through a Cursor IDE. Has anyone found a way to control Cursor remotely, maybe via a web API? Would love to hear ideas!
1 reply
0 recast
7 reactions

🐙 DappyKit pfp
🐙 DappyKit
@dappykit
Levels of entrepreneurs: - Buy domain names - Buy domains, ship apps - Buy domains, ship apps, do marketing What level are you on?
0 reply
0 recast
8 reactions

🐙 DappyKit pfp
🐙 DappyKit
@dappykit
So, for a few days, I've been actively testing Cursor. Developing some things has genuinely become faster, but there are issues too. It justifies its $20/month cost. Cursor mainly works with Claude. And they, in turn, claim that the new 3.7 model is a mid-level engineer.
2 replies
1 recast
7 reactions

🐙 DappyKit pfp
🐙 DappyKit
@dappykit
-17k
0 reply
0 recast
8 reactions

🐙 DappyKit pfp
🐙 DappyKit
@dappykit
Yes, it works! And in general, I’m trying to integrate Cursor into my life with simple projects. Let’s put it this way: it’s easier for some tasks than with other alternatives. Many routine tasks get implemented pretty quickly.
0 reply
0 recast
4 reactions

🐙 DappyKit pfp
🐙 DappyKit
@dappykit
Grok 3 is not bad.
1 reply
0 recast
12 reactions

🐙 DappyKit pfp
🐙 DappyKit
@dappykit
Google team lead secretly said that you can use the API key from Google AI Studio for free - in Cursor and other software, for example. I haven't checked it yet, but the studio itself looks interesting: share your screen, talk to Gemini, prompt gallery, etc.
0 reply
0 recast
11 reactions

🐙 DappyKit pfp
🐙 DappyKit
@dappykit
All these AI developments feel like the early crypto days—there’s constant buzz and mind-blowing stuff happening. DeepSeek appears out of nowhere—wow! GROK suddenly becomes the smartest of them all—wow! Y Combinator’s handing out $20K grants to students for summer AI projects, and the U.S. is pouring money into the AI industry. Me? I’m just a thrilled end user waiting for projects that shake up the physical world—like cooking meals, fixing my gadgets, or doing home renovations. It actually feels a whole lot closer now than it did five years ago.
0 reply
0 recast
5 reactions

🐙 DappyKit pfp
🐙 DappyKit
@dappykit
$8.5k per month from open source. A solo developer created an open-source project based on an idea that comes to the minds of many developers. Offline tools for data processing: base64<>text, URL encode/decode, UUID generation, and similar utilities. All of this can be done in the command line, but more than 200 people pay $40 per month. The main feature compared to websites is offline functionality. That’s it. How many web3 developers do you think would be willing to pay for such software? https://media.tenor.com/29h0he_U1PgAAAAC/hammer-tools
0 reply
0 recast
8 reactions

🐙 DappyKit pfp
🐙 DappyKit
@dappykit
🌟 An evening of wonderful stories.
0 reply
0 recast
9 reactions

🐙 DappyKit pfp
🐙 DappyKit
@dappykit
Well, yesterday I managed to find a way to modify the door opening sensor. Instead of a magnetic sensor, I soldered a physical switch. I will place the switch inside the door frame. Each time the door is locked with keys, the sensor will send a status update confirming the door is closed. The most interesting part is that a lot can fit inside the door frame: 2 WiFi sensors, 4 AAA batteries, and 2 physical switches. I’m waiting for the delivery of several cables. After that, the issue of whether the door is locked will be permanently solved. The status will always be available on the phone and can be shared with family members. It’s strange that no ready-made solutions could be found on the market.
0 reply
0 recast
13 reactions

🐙 DappyKit pfp
🐙 DappyKit
@dappykit
What do you think?
0 reply
0 recast
12 reactions