Joseph Izaguirre (@izaguirrejoe_) 's Twitter Profile
Joseph Izaguirre

@izaguirrejoe_

Co-Founder of Los Angeles AI Apps. We build MVPs with AI integration in as little as one week.

ID: 1859767827173154816

linkhttp://losangelesaiapps.com calendar_today22-11-2024 01:16:48

47 Tweet

12 Followers

89 Following

Ed Izaguirre (@eizaguir_lai) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Had two pieces of our work featured in the recent issue of the RoboRuby Ruby AI newsletter: - My article on the layers of the AI stack (losangelesaiapps.com/layers-of-the-…) - The Digital Press (thedigipress.com) Thanks Matt Solt! rubyai.beehiiv.com/p/ruby-ai-news…

Joseph Izaguirre (@izaguirrejoe_) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Just wrote about a new pattern that I discovered using the Popover API, Anchor Positioning and Turbo Frames. You can now lazy load popover elements on a page and anchor them to the trigger element, all without a single line of custom JavaScript! losangelesaiapps.com/lazy-loaded-po…

Just wrote about a new pattern that I discovered using the Popover API, Anchor Positioning and Turbo Frames.  You can now lazy load popover elements on a page and anchor them to the trigger element, all without a single line of custom JavaScript!

losangelesaiapps.com/lazy-loaded-po…
Ed Izaguirre (@eizaguir_lai) 's Twitter Profile Photo

When you think of incorporating AI into an MVP, what programming language do you reach for? For most people, it's Python. However, in a blog post I just published, I make the argument for why Ruby is the best language to use for AI MVPs. Check it out! losangelesaiapps.com/building-ai-ap…

Joseph Izaguirre (@izaguirrejoe_) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Found an excellent article by Akshay Khot on serving large files in Rails with a reverse proxy. He even dives into the source code for Thruster, the default Puma wrapper. I'd shout him out here, but I don't see him on Twitter: writesoftwarewell.com/serving-large-…

Samuel Williams (@ioquatix) 's Twitter Profile Photo

With my recent changes to IO#close 👉 github.com/ruby/ruby/pull…, Ruby 3.5 (aka the upcoming Ruby 4.0) speeds up IO operations across the board. `IO#close` is now faster — especially under contention! 🚀📈

With my recent changes to IO#close 👉 github.com/ruby/ruby/pull…,
Ruby 3.5 (aka the upcoming Ruby 4.0) speeds up IO operations across the board.
`IO#close` is now faster — especially under contention! 🚀📈
Joseph Izaguirre (@izaguirrejoe_) 's Twitter Profile Photo

It’s tempting for a Ruby shop to evaluate other languages when event-driven non-blocking I/O is a requirement. But Ruby is great at solving these types of problems, especially when paired with Async. losangelesaiapps.com/concurrent-web…

Towards Data Science (@tdatascience) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Your RAG setup is likely overcomplicated. Ed Izaguirre makes a compelling case for SQLite-vec as the ultimate minimalist stack for Retrieval-Augmented Generation, offering a cheaper, easier, and faster way to build. towardsdatascience.com/retrieval-augm…

Addison Del Mastro (@ad_mastro) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Japanese people run tiny shops like this because they're allowed to. We could also be allowed to, and that's what "urbanism" is all about. thedeletedscenes.substack.com/p/backyard-cof…

Japanese people run tiny shops like this because they're allowed to. We could also be allowed to, and that's what "urbanism" is all about. thedeletedscenes.substack.com/p/backyard-cof…
Ruby on Rails (@rails) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Introducing 'On Rails', a new podcast 🎙️ from the Rails Foundation where host Robby Russell explores the real-world decisions that go into building, maintaining, and scaling Ruby on Rails applications. Hear from engineers and leaders who’ve navigated legacy code, scaled

Introducing 'On Rails', a new podcast 🎙️ from the Rails Foundation where host <a href="/robbyrussell/">Robby Russell</a> explores the real-world decisions that go into building, maintaining, and scaling Ruby on Rails applications. 
Hear from engineers and leaders who’ve navigated legacy code, scaled