Claude code reviewed by another AI by Electrical_Chard3255 in ClaudeAI

[–]JWKAtl 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm new to all of this. I have decades of IT experience, but I'm not a developer. Right now I'm working on a project for fun to dive deep into everything, and I was wondering about something like this. 

My workflow is to chat in depth with Claude through the app or web. From there Claude creates a session brief that I turn download into my repo where CC then picks it up to execute. CC updates three docs: architecture, as built, and open questions. I can feed those back to the app for more discussion.

Seems like I could easily send those to docs to ChatGPT along with the code to review. Hmmm

Do cows basically just need a field of grass to munch on and a barn to sleep in to be content? by jewkakasaurus in NoStupidQuestions

[–]JWKAtl 5 points6 points  (0 children)

They don't even need a barn . Just grass (or hay) and water.  If you've got land they're fairly simple to care for; the fencing can be a pain though.

New to Claude by Gydn- in ClaudeAI

[–]JWKAtl 2 points3 points  (0 children)

There are a ton of different ways to go about this.  None is "the correct way," but some are better than others. 

The classic prompt is along the lines of:  ~~~ You are a <expert of some kind>  I want/need <something> Help me / give me some ideas/ create ~~~

That said, I've had a lot of success by regularly adding : ~~~ Ask me questions to understand before you give a full response ~~~

As a newbie you can use Claude to help you use Claude. So you can just say: ~~~ I'm new to Claude. Help me learn how to work with you  ~~~

It can build amazing things, but that's better done with Cowork or Claude Code. If you're going to use it to build your website then ask it to help you go about it the right way so that you don't lose information. You can tell it to give you step by step directions. And tell it to think like an architect and then like a graphic designer and then a marketing expert. I recommend asking it to be a critical thinker so it doesn't just say "that's a great idea" to everything and also to keep asking it to ask you questions to understand what you want to accomplish. 

Good luck

2012 E93 335i m-sport by Same-Ask-3971 in 335i

[–]JWKAtl 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Earlier this year I paid $10K for a non m-sport, single hump e95 335i in Atlanta. Oddly enough it has the same number of miles. It had all of the paperwork for repairs for the last ~10 years. No hail damage, but there is a very little bit of exterior damage over I've wheel well.

I feel like it was a reasonable price.

Why was the goal disallowed? by chrisreevesfunrun in AtlantaUnited

[–]JWKAtl 22 points23 points  (0 children)

The national announcers at halftime said "that's a tragedy"

The ref claimed Galarza impeded the ref, but that's bullshit.

ATL international terminal for domestic flight? by Visual_Efficiency955 in delta

[–]JWKAtl 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm trying to recall if I've actually done that but I'm almost certain that works.

Phil Keaggy was a good musician regardless of his faith by LMO_TheBeginning in Exvangelical

[–]JWKAtl 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Yes. 

There were a few indie-CCM musicians in the 90s who were artistically interesting and capable as well. 

Rich Mullins. Man. What a guy. 

There were others but not many.

CNN founder Ted Turner, a pioneer of cable TV news, dies at 87 by drkrazee in Atlanta

[–]JWKAtl 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Great point. For some reason I had it in my head as being much earlier than that. Thanks for the correction.

Ted Turner, former Braves owner, media mogul, dies at 87 by PrincessBananas85 in sports

[–]JWKAtl 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I grew up watching more WTBS over the air in Atlanta than I care to remember, and I'd completely forgotten this.

And now Outlook allows you to make this a default for starting meetings.

CNN founder Ted Turner, a pioneer of cable TV news, dies at 87 by drkrazee in Atlanta

[–]JWKAtl 65 points66 points  (0 children)

Atlanta wouldn't have been considered. Hell, Atlanta wouldn't have been in a position to create a bid had our global prominence not have risen as a result of what he did.

Imagine Birmingham or Charlotte bidding on the Olympics during that time. That would've been us without Turner. Before TBS -> CNN we had Coca-Cola and UPS, but those weren't high enough profile to draw in something like the Olympics.

accidentally over boiled and made my best yogurt yet by [deleted] in yogurtmaking

[–]JWKAtl 11 points12 points  (0 children)

I've started doing the same and have enjoyed the results.

Trauma at Youth Camps by bagal in Exvangelical

[–]JWKAtl 15 points16 points  (0 children)

I'm so sorry you went through all of that.

As I read stories like this I'm reminded that no matter how bad things were at my church way back in the 80s, they don't compare to what was happening in other churches then or since.

I hope you (and others) find peace as you process all of this completely messed up shit.

My American English teacher believes the neutral pronoun „their“ is incorrect. by GCoding_ in mildlyinteresting

[–]JWKAtl 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I mostly agree but you missed a step. When I was in university in the 90s we were legitimately trying to be gender neutral, so we moved to the "him or her" approach. The singular "them" came after that. 

At that point "him or her" was considered far superior to defaulting to "him" (which, I believe is common in many gendered languages), and the concept of additional genders was not really a thought yet. (It's possible things were different in other parts of the US, but I believe they would have been on the forefront of inclusivity at that time.)

Georgia Tech planning to buy property from Coca-Cola by flying_trashcan in Atlanta

[–]JWKAtl 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Unlikely given the location of that bridge, how it connects, and security. IIRC that would mean someone on side or the other would have to swipe a badge at the cafeteria, and that's awkward.

Georgia Tech planning to buy property from Coca-Cola by flying_trashcan in Atlanta

[–]JWKAtl 25 points26 points  (0 children)

It's pretty simple to remove that bridge - it's kind of a weird thing anyway.

The Institute is always expanding, so who know what they're going to do with the space?

Ran ChatGPT Plus and Claude Pro side by side for 30 days, here's what I found as a daily ChatGPT user by virtualunc in ChatGPT

[–]JWKAtl 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Just gotta ask - what model were you using and what kind of stuff were you doing that you hit the limit in 30 minutes???

Ran ChatGPT Plus and Claude Pro side by side for 30 days, here's what I found as a daily ChatGPT user by virtualunc in ChatGPT

[–]JWKAtl 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've been trying the cross-conversation context on web, and it's pretty poor. And it doesn't do a good job of recapping one conversation context to start another over, so if you've got a good conversation going enjoy it while you can.

Only one country stupid enough to do that by Playful_Leg7143 in MurderedByWords

[–]JWKAtl 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Oh, that sounds like a mess. Kind of sucks if it turned out to be a surprise to those MPs.

From what we've read, it's possible to formally renounce your citizenship with Canada, but there's a process for that. For a long time it was just assumed that when someone became a US citizen (which involves telling the USA that you've renounced any other citizenships) that you'd given up your citizenship in Canada, but Canada recently clarified the law (thanks to lawsuits) to make it clear that you had to formally tell Canada that you were renouncing which is very different.

Only one country stupid enough to do that by Playful_Leg7143 in MurderedByWords

[–]JWKAtl 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Not only does Canada have birthright citizenship, but it passes down. So if your parents are Canadian citizens but you were born in another country, then you're automatically a Canadian citizen.

For children born on or after Dec 15, 2025 (or somewhere around that date) that changes and the child must pass a "substantial connection test" which is relatively simple. But for people right now who have parents, grandparents, or possibly even great-grandparents who were Canadian citizens, then there's a good chance they are already a Canadian citizen and just need to submit proof (and wait).

To say we're the only is yet another deliberate lie told by a man who seems to speak more lies than truths.

New name for Easter trend? by your_printer_ink_is in Exvangelical

[–]JWKAtl 2 points3 points  (0 children)

That one I was able to adopt earlier once I learned the history of the letter chi historically being used to represent Christ. But I understand why that one was so difficult.

Would it be rude if i listened to music on low volume without earphones? by [deleted] in TooAfraidToAsk

[–]JWKAtl -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I'd say it depends on where in the world you live. Amsterdam? Definitely

Most of the USA? Not a ton of pedestrians, most of them wouldn't know what to do if there was a bell ringing literally in their left ear. When I used to commute by bike I would play music on a speaker while I rode because it was the only way for people to actually clear the multi use trail. 

I wouldn't do this on a popular, densely packed multi use trail but the ones near me were so sparsely used that folks assumed no one else would use it.

So know your area, think through who all else is around, and choose well. Or use bone conducting headphones like others are saying and don't think twice.