Last week I posted about the mental and physical toll of AI-intensive coding sessions.
I started calling it AI exhaustion. Turns out there's...
Last week, I could feel myself breaking down mentally and physically from AI coding sessions.
With Claude Code, I regularly run 3+ sessions at a time. When I finish giving instructions to one, another is waiting. The gaps between tasks where I'd normally get a mental and physical break don't exist...
Twelve hours. That's how long it took to build a feature that would have been two to three weeks of work six months ago.
Not a prototype. Not a proof of concept. A report generation system that requires research and analysis spread across multiple LLM calls, plugged into an existing module with es...
The most important skill in AI-assisted development isn't prompting. It's management.
I spent this week building agents, shipping code with agents, and cleaning up after agents. And the pattern that kept showing up had nothing to do with the technology. It was the same pattern I've been teaching i...
I wrapped up two big initiatives this week—moving a set of services from cloud platforms to Linux VPSs, and finally launching this blog. That freed up some mental space to start experimenting with agentic, command-line coding tools.
I spent time with two of them:
If you're a software engineer starting to build with AI, you've probably sat in meetings where people casually throw around terms like "LangChain," "embeddings," or "hugging face." If you've nodded along while mentally cataloging what to research later, you're not alone.
The AI space has its own...