London based software development consultant

  • 1.36K Posts
  • 136 Comments
Joined 9 months ago
Cake day: September 29th, 2025

















  • This article is not advocating AI driven development. It’s arguing a human understanding the problem, and how best to solve it, is the most important work.

    I’m not anti-spec. Far from it. I think rigorous, well-structured specs are about to be the single most important artifact in software. Read the book. Adopt the format. Use the tools. The mechanics matter and I’m not waving them away.

    But the spec is a vessel. The recipe is not the cooking. If we pour mediocre understanding into a perfectly-formatted spec, we get perfectly-formatted slop, faster and at scale. The format is necessary. It is nowhere near sufficient.

    The real work - the part no tool will do for you - is the human work of digging in. Of actually understanding the problem and the person you’re solving it for, deeply enough to have an opinion about what right feels like. Of capturing not just the requirements but the taste. The why. The elegance. The exact sweet spot of how it should work.







  • By using such a formulaic reply, as an LLM would, I’m emphasising your point. 🤣

    My point, and that of the author of the article is not to defend AI slop, rather it’s to offer real criticism, instead of making the accusation that something is AI generated:

    That isn’t criticism. It gives the author nothing to fix. No sentence. No claim. No result. Just a little accusation dropped in the middle of the room. Just sending bad vibes for no reason


  • And it is rude to expect people to proofread your slop.

    The author isn’t defending slop, in fact they hate it too:

    I utterly hate AI-generated content. I don’t want machines to replace personal writing with synthetic filler.

    What they are arguing for is AI assisted proof reading tools, particularly if English isn’t your native tongue:

    But a spell checker doesn’t make a post fake. Grammarly didn’t make old posts fake. A machine helping a non-native speaker write more readable English doesn’t make the work fake.


  • Would you like to share any other social insights to continue this line of thought or would you like to find other places to share this thought so others can benefit from it?

    Could you please explain what you’re trying to say? Are you saying that a programming community on the topic of AI, is not an appropriate place to share this article?


  • I agree that the AI generated image is trashy, however the article is a cautionary tale about the pitfalls of relying on agentic coding, instead of collaborating with other developers.

    But there is always a ceiling on how far a single-player game can take you, even with agents. Software that lasts, software that grows, software that people can actually depend on – that is built by groups of people exercising judgment together over time. By teams developing shared taste, shared mental models, shared sense of what their product should be. None of that happens through individual prompting, no matter how clever the prompts.




  • This is a fascinating article about the history of software development. For me the key quotes are:

    The thing that killed Waterfall was that discovering your spec was wrong months later, after lots of code had been written - and fixing it cost a fortune because writing code was the most expensive part of the process.

    The key reason Agile was invented was to account for the high cost of writing code, so yes, that part of the Agile value proposition is no more.

    The risk isn’t that AI development is inherently Waterfall. The risk is that organizations with latent Waterfall instincts will use spec-generation as license to do the bad thing they always wanted to do — front-load requirements, skip customer validation, equate a fancier document with a better outcome, and ship one massive thing every quarter.


  • codeinaboxOPtoProgrammingUsing My Fucking Brain
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    1 month ago

    This quote from the article really sums it up:

    And to be clear, I don’t care whether you typed the code yourself. I care whether you understood it before you shipped it. I care whether you can explain why the bug happened, why this fix is the right fix, what the model might have missed, and what would make you roll it back.








  • Some developers are now spending $500 a day (!!) on Claude Code. Practically speaking, this means that employee costs have doubled.

    Where is this magic money tree for tokens? Reading through this article, it seems that some companies are happy to spend money on tokens. However, I doubt there is the same enthusiasm for training or conferences.


  • codeinaboxOPtoCSSScroll-Driven Animations
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    2 months ago

    I am against scrolljacking too. Though having read through the article, and seen the animation in action at https://whimsy.joshwcomeau.com/, this is not scrolljacking, it’s just something that animates as you scroll. It’s so unobtrusive that I didn’t notice it the first time.


  • codeinaboxOPtoCSSScroll-Driven Animations
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    2 months ago

    That is a good question. The beauty of the web is that readers can control their experience, be it with ad blockers, increasing the font-size, reader mode, or even changing the whole experience with user style sheets or Greasemonkey. This doesn’t mean it’s a waste of time to bother with pretty designs. People should build websites that they’re proud of, and accept that people might override their design with one better suited to their needs or taste.


  • codeinaboxOPtoCSSScroll-Driven Animations
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    2 months ago

    Do we know the average user hits the back button when they encounter CSS animations? I was just a conference, and people were talking about browsing the web in reader mode, which I’d argue is more likely.