Podcast Appearances
Like how do these coding agents tend to function?
Like when they start delegating stuff or using sub-agents, like how does that kind of, how do those mechanics work?
And so I think for a home labber that if you want to explore more about just like the protocols and the request headers and the bodies and like how these coding agents are sort of like, you know, how the API calls evolve and how the contexts evolve, it's super neat.
But somebody else might if I'm in an enterprise.
Yeah, totally.
When I started using Coding Agent, I'm scared to go back because it might be embarrassing.
It's like, ooh, I was burning a lot of tokens on useless things.
I didn't know how to use this tool properly.
But the thing is, we're all trying to learn how to use these tools properly.
And the thing is, they change every few months.
I think back to earlier Sonnet versions back in September versus what I'm using now.
It's night and day, the capabilities.
Teams really have to stay on top of this stuff if you want to keep up with it.
Yeah, privacy, obviously, security is key.
I think people have to be pretty open and candid and transparent if they actually want to learn with this space and really leveraging and getting advice from other people too, which is another one of the reasons I'm so excited about Aperture just in terms of the transformation I think it can help our company make because we're seven years old.
We've got a lot of incredible engineers and other people working on all sorts of technical stuff.
When we started the company, LOMs basically didn't exist.
And look where the industry is now.
I dare think where it's going to be a year from now, we have to adapt and learn more about these things.
But a world where people are just clicking yes all the time is not a world I want.