Anton Sotkov (@antons) 's Twitter Profile
Anton Sotkov

@antons

I make apps @iA. @[email protected]

ID: 17623551

linkhttp://sotkov.com calendar_today25-11-2008 16:38:33

3,3K Tweet

568 Takipçi

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iA Presenter (@iapresenter) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Launch day! iA Presenter is now available for everyone, and we’re on Product Hunt today. producthunt.com/posts/ia-prese… We’d love your support. In case you have questions you always wanted to ask and never dared to: We’ll be there all day for the AMA. See you there!

Sauli Niinistö (@niinisto) 's Twitter Profile Photo

This day marked the official closing of the formal integration process between Finnish Defence Forces and NATO military structures. The process has been very fast. Our almost 30 years of close cooperation and military interoperability with NATO has made that pace possible.

This day marked the official closing of the formal integration process between Finnish Defence Forces and NATO military structures.

The process has been very fast. Our almost 30 years of close cooperation and military interoperability with NATO has made that pace possible.
iA Writer (@iawriter) 's Twitter Profile Photo

iA Writer 7 dims the text you paste from AI tools. As you edit ChatGPT’s input and make it your own, iA Writer keeps track of what is yours and what isn’t. ia.net/topics/ia-writ…

Pedro – oss/acc (@pepicrft) 's Twitter Profile Photo

I won’t cease to repeat it. Today, SwiftPM is a package manager that has accidentally been used as a project by the community, and therefore some of its design decisions don’t make it a good substitute of static Xcode projects. At least if you care about the DX of your team.

I won’t cease to repeat it. Today, SwiftPM is a package manager that has accidentally been used as a project by the community, and therefore some of its design decisions don’t make it a good substitute of static Xcode projects. At least if you care about the DX of your team.
Peter Steinberger (@steipete) 's Twitter Profile Photo

LOOK AT THIS BEAUTY Anton Sotkov did some magic, elegantly keeping the existing AppKit menu but enriching it with sprinkles of SwiftUI. New bits are out! codexbar.app

LOOK AT THIS BEAUTY
<a href="/antons/">Anton Sotkov</a> did some magic, elegantly keeping the existing AppKit menu but enriching it with sprinkles of SwiftUI.
New bits are out! codexbar.app
Mario Zechner (@badlogicgames) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Recommended reading. Glad I'm not alone in thinking that long threads are bad. Which is also why I was hesitant adding compaction. It's an antipattern imo. This won't change as long as model architectures for long context windows continue to be smoke and mirrors.

Karri Saarinen (@karrisaarinen) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Ryo Lu Every tool and device has their opinion. Each of them influence you in their ways. They make certain actions easy and others annoying. Yes everything has a tradeoff. Very flexible system offers a lot of choices to make, but less guidance. Opinionated system offers guidance and

Peter Steinberger (@steipete) 's Twitter Profile Photo

CodexBar 0.12 is out! I iterated on this for hours. Found the menu entries to cluttered until I got the idea to make the entries submenus. Ofc that was tricky to place the > chefron, I had to tweak the highlight to not be bright-blue; added a bar for credits, a buy shortcut, and

CodexBar 0.12 is out! I iterated on this for hours. Found the menu entries to cluttered until I got the idea to make the entries submenus. Ofc that was tricky to place the &gt; chefron, I had to tweak the highlight to not be bright-blue; added a bar for credits, a buy shortcut, and
Anton Sotkov (@antons) 's Twitter Profile Photo

It’s been a couple of months since I read Peter Steinberger 🦞’s earlier post and decided to give Codex a try. It clicked. My process has changed more than it has in the decade before, and I couldn’t be happier. I started writing code because I wanted to make apps for iPhone and Mac. It

Greg Brockman (@gdb) 's Twitter Profile Photo

"Codex has allowed me to put much more energy towards the higher-level work, without getting bogged down by the minute details.":

Peter Steinberger (@steipete) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The best part? It comes with a new visual indicator for pace, so you don't have to read anymore to see if you're vibing too fast or too slow. Props to Anton Sotkov for the work! It's the details. github.com/steipete/Codex…

The best part? It comes with a new visual indicator for pace, so you don't have to read anymore to see if you're vibing too fast or too slow.

Props to <a href="/antons/">Anton Sotkov</a> for the work! It's the details. github.com/steipete/Codex…
Peter Steinberger (@steipete) 's Twitter Profile Photo

I'm joining OpenAI to bring agents to everyone. @OpenClaw is becoming a foundation: open, independent, and just getting started.🦞 steipete.me/posts/2026/ope…

nicopreme (@nicopreme) 's Twitter Profile Photo

CryptoPatrick Mario Zechner Go deep on niches that pull you in. If you open PRs on an OSS repo, respect the maintainer's time and don’t submit slop - your PRs should be tight, human reviewed and manually tested. Focus on shipping useful stuff that provide value to others.

Sherwin Wu (@sherwinwu) 's Twitter Profile Photo

This matches my own experience with GPT-5.3-Codex – I basically only run it on xhigh nowadays for all coding tasks. With all the speed improvements too, it doesn't even feel that slow, even at `xhigh`.