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Anthropic has been trying to win the developer marketshare, and has been quite successful with Claude Code. While I understand the argument that this acquisition is to protect their usage in CC or even just to acquire the team, I do hope that part of their goal is to use this to strengthen their brand. Being good stewards of open source projects is a huge part of how positively I view a company.


> Being good stewards of open source projects is a huge part of how positively I view a company.

Maybe an easier first step would be to open source Claude Code...?


I think because their models are open (e.g. CC can send any instruction and it’ll use your max plan), they need to keep the code obfuscated to prevent people from sending everybody and their mother through that API.

Codex has the opposite issue. It has an open client, which is relatively pointless, because it will accept only one system prompt and one prompt only.


While I agree with you broadly, remember that those that employ you don't have those skills either. They accept that they are ceding control of the details and trust us to make those decisions or ask clarifying questions (LLMs are getting better at those things too). Vibe coders are clients seeking an alternative, not developers.


Maybe i'm not "vibing" enough, but i've actually been testing this recently. So far i think the thing "vibing" helps most with for me personally is just making decisions which i'm often too tired to do after work.

I've been coming to the realization that working with LLMs offer a different set of considerations than working on your own. Notably i find that i often obsess about design, code location, etc because if i get it wrong then my precious after-work time and energy are wasted on refactoring. The larger the code base, the more crippling this becomes for me.

However refactoring is almost not an issue with LLMs. They do it very quickly and aggressively. So the areas i'm not vibing on is just reviewing, and ensuring it isn't committing any insane sins. .. because it definitely will. But the structure i'm accepting is far from what i'd make myself. We'll see how this pans out long term for me, but it's a strategy that i'm exploring.

On the downside, my biggest difficulty with LLMs is getting them to just.. not. To produce less. Choosing too large of tasks is very easy and the code can snowball before you have a chance to pump the breaks and course correct.

Still, it's been a positive experience so far. I still consider it vibing though because i'm accepting far less quality work than what i'd normally produce. In areas where it matters though, i enforce correctness, and have to review everything as a result.


> Vibe coders are clients seeking an alternative, not developers.

Agreed. That's genuinely a good framing for clients.


> One implication would be to skip college, take that money and invest it in the stock market. Why invest in labor when capital grows faster? Although I don't think anyone with this mindset would offer that advice, but rather dwell in the fact that they are laborers by design with no hope of ever breaking that.

As a student, I could easily get a loan to cover my tuition, but the bank would not let me barrow money to gamble in the stock market. Even if they would, I of course would have also not taken that route. There were experiences I was interested in having and things I was interested in learning.

Now I have the capital to invest and those experiences I sought, but I still don't wish to become a capitalist or a landlord or a day trader. I take great pride in being a labourer.


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