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They really do love standards


Version 2 of prismabuilder.io

A graphical web interface for building out Prisma database schemas, and then exporting the code.


I use it with Arch and it’s very stable. It does use Wayland.


I really do want this to be the case


> And I expect these costs will drop as models become cheaper.

Wait, models will get cheaper?


Costs are decreasing due to technological advancements, increased model efficiency, and the availability of smaller, more specialized models.

Large frontier models remain expensive, but costs for powerful yet cost-effective models have dropped significantly, and there’s no reason to believe this trend won’t continue.

Specific reasons for cost reduction:

- Smaller, More Efficient Models

- Improved Training and Hardware

- Mixture of Experts (MoE) Architecture

- Specialization

Evidence of cost declines include: price drops, cost-effective edge deployments, commoditization of core capabilities.


So we’re supposed to start paying $1k-$1,5k on top of already crazy salaries just to maybe get a productivity boost on trivial to semi trivial issues? I know my boss would not be keen on that at least.


If devs salaries are so crazy its quite the opposite. NOT investing 1-1.5k/mo to improve their productivity by a measurable amount would quite literally be just plain stupid and I would question your boss ability to think critically.

Not to mention - while I know many don't like it, they may be able to achieve enough of a productivity boost to not require hiring as many of those crazy salaried devs.

Its literally a no-brainer. Thinking about it from just the individual cost factor is too simplified a view.


Hardware companies routinely license individual EDA tool seats that cost more than numerous developer salaries - $1k/year is nothing if it improves productivity by any measurable amount.


The OP was saying it's $1k/mo. That's a 5-10% raise, which is a bit more than nothing.


There are many companies that regularly spend much more than that on other software related licenses that devs need to do their job productively.

If the average US salaried developer is 10-15% more productive for just 1k more a month it is literally a no-brainer for companies to invest in that.

Of course on the other side of the coin there are many companies that are very stingy with paying for literally anything for their employees that could measurably improve productivity, and hamper their ability to be productive by intentionally paying for cheap shitty tools. They will just lose out.


It isn’t a raise. Salaries are on a very different budget. Money is fungible etc but don’t tell accounting.


Parent comment isn't joking. Good simulators for RF stuff can be well over $5k per month.


I can't use $20 of credit (gpt-5 thinking via intellij's pro AI subscription) a month right now with plenty of usage so I'm surprised at the $1k figure. Is Claude that much more expensive? (a quick Google suggests yes actually).

Having said the above some level of AI spending is the new reality. Your workplace pays for internet right? Probably a really expensive fast corporate grade connection? Well they now also need to pay for an AI subscription. That's just the current reality.


I don't know what Intellij's AI integration is like, but my brief Claude Code experience is that it really chews through tokens. I think it's a combination of putting a lot of background info into the context, along with a lot of "planning" sort of queries that are fairly invisible to the end user but help with building that background for the ultimate query.

Aider felt similar when I tried it in architect mode; my prompt would be very short and then I'd chew through thousands of tokens while it planned and thought and found relevant code snippets and etc.


Paying for Internet is not a great analogy imo. If you don't pay $1k/mo for Internet, you literally can't work.

What happens if you don't pay $1k/mo for Claude? Do you get an appreciable drop in productivity and output?

Genuinely asking.


Anthropic and OpenAI both have a high SSO/enterprise tier tax.


The fast corporate internet connection is probably 1000$ for 100 developers or more...


And remember. This is on subsadised prices.


Exactly, makes it feel almost like an advertorial for Anthropic, who likely need most customers to pay 1000 bucks a month to break even.


It will certainly be interesting to see how businesses evolve in the upcoming years. What is written in stone is, you (employee) will be measured and I am curious to see what developers will be measured by in the future. Will you be at a greater risk of layoffs/lack of promotions/etc. if you spend more on AI? How do you as a developer prove that it is you and not the LLM that should be praised?


The high salaries make productivity improvements even more important.


If the world wasnt a garbage hole of mis-alignment and planning : The people seeing positivity out of this stuff would be demanding raises immediately, both AI experts and seniors should be demanding the company pay and train juniors as part of their loyalty commitment to the company


I’d bet my money on the GitButler team. They’re experts in a small market and I think they’ll do something great. I don’t think their current product is it, but I think they’ll do something great.


Basically, just a simpler version Obsidian. Also open source. But honestly, I'm not trying to sell anything here. Built something I wanted, and thought some other people might enjoy it too :)


Very cool, thanks for sharing!


I also think a very large majority of people on this planet are tired because of an unknown deficit of vitamines and minerals like Omega 3, Zink and Vitamin D


I never ate much meat but I do eat fermented-only dairy. I got my bloodwork done and I am iron deficient. I am taking the bisglycinate salt which is completely unnoticeable on my stomach. I'll have it retested after a course of 5000mg elemental iron equivalents (about a month). My mood noticeably improved after checking and correcting my blood vitamin and iron levels.


Also high CO2 in working and sleeping areas. Basically any older building without HVAC and with upgraded (double pane) windows.


Most home HVAC systems don’t bring in fresh air, right? Just recirculate air in the house.


V in HVAC is for "ventilation" and although home AC unit might not provide it itself, I'd be surprised if there really wasn't any. Unlike AC, V is mandated by law in many jurisdictions.


The ones I know suck air out of the building (well, really, create a mild low pressure), and rely on fresh air getting in elsewhere (for example through dedicated intakes around windows in apartments.)


Newer homes are supposed to have heat recovery ventilators, which do bring in fresh air even if all windows are closed.


Is there any research to back that claim up?


Vitamin D deficiency is well known enough it should stand up to the simple concern trolling done by people who demand a source like every post must be an academic journal.


Significant. Have you tried Google?


Or just rewrite vscode in Rust?


For better or worse, Microsoft is all in on the JS ecosystem. I could sooner see TypeScript being rewritten in Rust: at least from a performance perspective, there’s a lot more room to improve there. But I think it’s safe to say that’s not gonna happen.

VSCode is much larger, and much more complex. I just can’t imagine it happening ever.


No I can't see it happening either. But why spend a lot of time reinventing a wheel when everything about VSCode is actually pretty good, except its performance. But I'm a Vim user anyways so what do I care...


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