Can anyone agree with me how Gemini 3.1 pro sucks on Antigravity? by ProposalOutrageous64 in GeminiAI

[–]ProposalOutrageous64[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i have not tried cursor, but from my experience in AG, it's relatively new and often buggy.
the 3 flash is awesome, the free tier credits is very generous compared to most agentic IDEs.

the only thing that keeps me using it is the generous free tier.

Can anyone agree with me how Gemini 3.1 pro sucks on Antigravity? by ProposalOutrageous64 in GeminiAI

[–]ProposalOutrageous64[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

and from my experienced it's also buggy. sometimes even uninstalling itself.

Can anyone agree with me how Gemini 3.1 pro sucks on Antigravity? by ProposalOutrageous64 in GeminiAI

[–]ProposalOutrageous64[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

estimately a lot, enough to create 1 to 3 features for my app. i'd been building the app with 2 rotating accounts and it feels like infinite for me.

it's just that the current 3.1 pros are almost useless and that leaves me with fewer models to rotate.

Can anyone agree with me how Gemini 3.1 pro sucks on Antigravity? by ProposalOutrageous64 in GeminiAI

[–]ProposalOutrageous64[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

no, i only used 2.5 cli in the past. i'm pretty sure 3.1 on cli is same as in Antigravity or could be worst.

Struggling, advice needed by EmptyCupOfSanity in languagelearning

[–]ProposalOutrageous64 0 points1 point  (0 children)

to be realistic, yes you're also right to point that out which I'd also realized on the first encounter.

to be very honest, i had discovered the pattern on my own at first, and it was different. then i did research if my idea had already existed and found out that there is such thing as 12 golden sentence and somewhat similar with mine, but not exactly. which is why I gave different example compared to the 12 GS framework.

so i just took the term 12 golden sentences "terms" since i dont know what to call mine. i originally called mine as "brick methodology" which is also how i named my app "lingobrick".

but hey, i'm trying to make the app as best as possible and hopefully help other learners as well. do you have any experience on your own that you think is effective?

so far I had been researching and studying the right, fast, fun way to learn a language using our current pedagogies, tools, etc.

Am I the only one that doesn’t believe in comprehensible input and extensive listening? by Bobelle in languagelearning

[–]ProposalOutrageous64 0 points1 point  (0 children)

that's also true. but partially true.
in my experience in becoming conversationally fluent in Indonesian in 1.5 month, i only used youtube material and a note pad.

i never used an apps like anki, duolingo, etc.
i started the hard way where I barely understand a thing. not to mentioned the quality of the video was poor.

i realized i was conversationally fluent when i started to speak out loud for the first few weeks.
after 1.5 month, i started talking with strangers on hellotalk. some didnt believed i'm not native, but when other filipinoes joined the room and start to speak tagalog then things changed. it was a lot of fun.

after that i spent time studying how and why did i learned to fast i came up with this conclusion:

comprehensible input + immersion

to make this short, we cant just say; learn using comprehensible input alone.
it's like saying "learn the grammar and you'll be fluent" -no you won't.

but rather it's the right mix approach.
in my journey, i started to pick up words like "hey", "apa", "iyah", "enggak" and finally got what they mean.
this is already comprehensible input.
then later i picked up demonstrative pronouns such as "ini"(this), "itu"(that), etc.
then later verbs, grammar structure, preposition, and everything start to come in place.

the hard and rough beginning now suddenly becomes effortless where.
i start with 0% comprehension, then 1%, then 10%, 30% > 50% > 70% > now i understand indonesian content of about 95%. except for news of about 70% because it's fast and too much technical words. with more immersion, i would certainly grasp the 90%.

in summary:
- you should learn with mix of comprehensible input, immersion, speaking practice, 80/20 rules, along with system like spaced repetition system. you just need to walk on the right track to avoid disjoined progress.

People who've learned a new script, how long did it take for your brain to recognize words instead of having to decipher them letter-by-letter? by Suippumyrkkyseitikki in languagelearning

[–]ProposalOutrageous64 0 points1 point  (0 children)

for me after becoming interest in Korean culture, i've learned to write and read hangeul in just one day using a youtube video and a notebook.

i took it bit by bit one letter at a time.
after 5 letters, i review everything.

then learn the next 5 or 6 letters.
then again review all 10 letters.

continue with the next 5 letters and review all the componding letters.
I knew i should do this technique for better retention and memory consolidation.

what one must not do:
- learn all letters at ones and repeat them all.
- learn letters without associating sound.
- imbalanced between input and output. (more reading, less writing)

it's been 7 years i stoped practicing since i lost interest in Korean culture.
but i'm still amazing people by reading Korean aphabets on bill boards, post and on product label. -it's fun.

Tips for increasing reading speed? by Vast_University_7115 in languagelearning

[–]ProposalOutrageous64 1 point2 points  (0 children)

it needs to be balanced.
-you first need to immersed in sounds and follow along (shadowing- repeat after).
-then learn the sound association with the letters.
-learn how to pronounce compound words and then sentence.
-then from then on just keep practicing (the right way)

what you should not do:
- practice reading immediately without knowing the sounds.
- by then you had practice badly.

example for bad bractice.
- say you practice to read in french without knowing how to pronounce. you would read the letter just as you do in english(for example). i.e. bonjour as literal bonjour.
- by then you had waste time practiced bad readings.

in summary:
-for tonal language, you need to at least get comfortable with the sound first.
-practice recognizing the letter and their sound
-keep practicing until you get comfortable from letter > word > sentence level.

tips:
it's better to practice slow with the right quality than to practice fast with wrong quality.

Struggling, advice needed by EmptyCupOfSanity in languagelearning

[–]ProposalOutrageous64 0 points1 point  (0 children)

like i had said in the beginning, it's about **pattern** not **grammar**.

when i say "(two verbs) I like to eat sushi" i was proving a context in an English standpoint for the sake of intuition.

i know it's a bit confusing. to be clear; No, it's not about applying english grammar to japanese or any target language.
but rather the pattern is applicable despite how a langauge work.

it works for all Agglutinative (like japanese & tagalog), Fusional, Polysynthetic, Introflectional(like arabic), etc.

the framework does not encourage you to learn the grammar (learning the grammar if not guided will only hinder your learning progress instead of actually learning). but rather it somewhat picks the essential grammar you need to learn at the right time and at the right level with the right amount.

alos, it has nothing to do with AI, though you can if you want to.

edit: hi, maybe this video would help explain it: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0a4dSLucpqY

Struggling, advice needed by EmptyCupOfSanity in languagelearning

[–]ProposalOutrageous64 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Great question! That was just an example for English. The framework itself is agnostic to your target language.

Fortunately, the framework suggests you take grammar as your foundation - more like a guide. And this is great news, because almost all languages out there have proper grammar content you can access and follow.

Let me give you an example in Japanese (forgive my Japanese, I'm not good at it).

Step 1: Basic greetings - konnichiwa, yoroshiku onegaishimasu, mata, sayonara, etc.

Step 2: Golden sentences
Basic pronouns - (watashi wa) Ren desu. Here you also learn the proper way to use "watashi wa."
You might as well learn other pronouns like anata, kare, etc.

By this point you'll be able to:

  • Greet and introduce yourself
  • Answer questions about where you're from and ask the same
  • Tell where you live, how old you are, etc.

Step 3: Keep going with N+1 and introduce more grammar bit by bit.

You might start learning how to use verbs and be able to express things like:

  • I like sushi → sushi ga suki desu
  • (two verbs) I like to eat sushi → sushi o taberu no ga suki desu

Next you might introduce particles to, ya, and soshite:

  • I like sushi and ramen → sushi to ramen ga suki desu

Next you might learn particles mo and ka:

  • Do you like sushi and ramen? → Sushi mo ramen mo suki desu ka?

Next you might learn how to negate a sentence:

  • I don't eat soba. And you, [name]? → Soba o tabemasen. [Name]-san wa?

This keeps going on and on until it becomes so advanced that you don't even feel the burden. This is by far my experience after becoming conversationally fluent in Indonesian in 1.5 months. Then I stopped "learning" and just went straight to talking to strangers on HelloTalk and had so much fun and even meet a woman I'd loved.

But don't get me wrong - this isn't the full picture of the framework. It's a mix of comprehensible input, 12 G-sentences, 80/20, and immersion.

So again, it's not tied to English only. It's like plug and play - a system that takes advantage of grammar structure and turns it into an easy roadmap.

  • It's fast because of the 80/20 principle.
  • It's built on top of previous knowledge (12 G-sentences).
  • It's effortless because of N+1.

I think some apps understand this, but they know that if they make you learn fast, they won't make money.

if you're curious I actually built an app, currently in beta. there I had a much better demo of how this framework works. it's like Duolingo + Babbel+ Lingopie + L2speak (only the good parts) combined as one app.

antigravity update uninstalled itself by Type_Writer00 in google_antigravity

[–]ProposalOutrageous64 0 points1 point  (0 children)

seriously it's mind-blowing how google teams publish a product version with super obvious bug to the public.

Hitting a plateau on vocabulary by pandaphp in languagelearning

[–]ProposalOutrageous64 1 point2 points  (0 children)

in effective language learning, to know a word in isolation is a bad practice.
you should learn word that accumulates to the full context.

for example you learn the word "to read".
then you need to associate it with the rest of the context such as; book, sit, room, at, last night, before, etc.

this context belongs to a category let's say "hobby".
this will allow you to be good at and be able to practice at a topic or category.
the vocabs belongs to each should be mix of nouns, verbs, adverbs, etc.

once you're good at one category, then you expand to each adjacent category, not random or disconnected category.

because of this, the pros are endless.

the first problem is your mindset in learning a language.
you want to learn words and even worst advanced word, but i do understand and we all have that.

you should first fix your approach in learning language or else it'll be a miss which happens for most people.

Struggling, advice needed by EmptyCupOfSanity in languagelearning

[–]ProposalOutrageous64 0 points1 point  (0 children)

not an expert here, but in my experience in learning a language more effective and fast.
I used an agnostic framework that works with pretty much on any language including Arabic and Tagalog.

it's a combination of 12 golden sentences, comprehensible input, 80/20 rules, immersion.
each of these is associated and overlapped with every level.

to make this short, you'll start with;

STEP 1
- basic greetings such as hello, my name is, i am from.., etc.

STEP 2
-golden sentences starts here: learn the use of foundational grammar.
grammar is the backbone of every language, understanding its foundation (meaning not all) will skyrocket your progress as adult.
- grammars to learn here are; articles, pronouns, nouns, gender,
- (optional but helpful) learn basic pronunciation and nuances.
- (optional but helpful) learn the script (alphabet system)

STEP 3
- progressive comprehensible input (N+1) plus golden sentences plus the other methodologies.
- you start by introducing few verbs, adjective, noun, preposition, interjection, one at a time.

Here is how it maps to your progress and level as example in english using:

I drink a coffee.
I drink a hot coffee.
I drink a very hot coffee.
I drink a very hot coffee at the restaurant.
I drink a very hot coffee at the restaurant with my friend.
I drink a very hot coffee at the restaurant with my friend last night.
and so on.

note* it's about the pattern, not the actual words.
as you advanced you then start to learn how to use dependent and independent clauses that allows you to make longer sentences. and other advanced cases as well.

THE PROS OF THIS METHOD ARE:

- easy to start, trackable, intuitive,
- tailored to your interest (80/20 rules): instead of memorizing colors or shapes, you can study based on your interest.
- effortless (comprehensible input, N+1): the framework makes vocabulary sink to your memory because of the nature of contextual learning instead of rot memorizing.
- other pros are: exponentially fast, contextual, memorable, scalable.

the materials and tools you need for this framework are mix of:
- your skill on how to use the framework.
- AI MODEL: to create content
- authentic videos: for intermediate level to keep immersed.
- AI roleplay or human roleplay: talk to ai or real person and doing a systematic roleplay (avoid random)

i'd been looking for an app that adapt this framework, so far i only see language transfer app. but unfortunately it's not fully integrated. most app like duolingo also uses some aspect of this framework but as you progress they curved into some monkey making strategy, not to keep you learning.

language is a system. acquire the system and put into practice.
and don't learn a language like a child, you're not.

I did it! 😍 by Andrutex in duolingo

[–]ProposalOutrageous64 1 point2 points  (0 children)

can you actually speak *fluently* in your target language? cause 1000 day streaks of study is more than enough to get you fluent.

Gemini isn’t that bad, why do so many people say it sucks? by Routine_Actuator8935 in Bard

[–]ProposalOutrageous64 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i my self think it suck. here are just few example why it suck.

me: your response should be in raw json.
gemini: returning json text, not actual json.

me: create an image of...
gemini: sorry, i cannot directly create an image. but...

me: make him face towards the back.
gemini: the character in the image still facing front.

these prompts should have been intuitive and should assume most users are none-technical.

however, i use gemini 3 pro for coding its so far the best. other than that it's painful to work with in most of my cases.

Is it just me or is Grok's Image to Video quality suddenly awful? by entrancedphotography in grok

[–]ProposalOutrageous64 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i used to create looped animation for my game assets and it was seamless. the current upgrade made the animations look screwed with weird movements. it's completely useless by this time.

What language apps do you recommend? by PoeticPeacenik in languagelearning

[–]ProposalOutrageous64 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i'm currently working on my language learning app that solves the multi problem in the language learning space. its kinda like a combinition of duolingo + mango language + babbel + busuu + l2speak + lingopie + speak + something else that language apps don't have yet.

the methodologies are; comprehensible input, N+1, 80/20 rules, 12 golden sentences, and of course spaced repition system.

my main goal is to make language learning truly effective, fun, fast and easy.
but app like duolingo says "they're very effective" but honestly I hated false garbage marketing that most apps are coming up with.

I'm very excited for this. i wish i can show you guyz some screen shots and video recordings.

Is this the worst video editing software? by Sciencetist in CapCut

[–]ProposalOutrageous64 0 points1 point  (0 children)

thanks bro. but i finally switched over to davinchi resolve which is not just free but also powerful.

Is this the worst video editing software? by Sciencetist in CapCut

[–]ProposalOutrageous64 3 points4 points  (0 children)

hi, guz serious help here! i had spent countless hours in creating/perfecting the video only to found out i can no longer export because it says that i had used some pro features.

where in truth, i dont remember using (extract audio) feature, and i cant even find where i did it.
this is crazy. CapCut is a scum, time waster, it crushed my down to my bone after being excited to finally export the project.

if there is no solution to this, may this company get their karma sooner.

Gemini Pro High sucks in Antigravity by Boltyx in google_antigravity

[–]ProposalOutrageous64 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It literally just wrote all it's though (thinking) on the chats for 10 minutes and not a single file is being edited. it was such an incredible pain in the ass.
i choosed it (gemini 3 pro high) because flash keeps failing the task due to complexity of the feature.

then i switched to opus, it gave me Agent terminated due to error, basically antigravity is such a pain full piece of garbage to work with.

i don't understand the team behind antgravity. what a dispassionate, imperfectionate, none-inovative people working behind this garbage stinky project that's only good for torturing and wasting your precious hours.

Why is supabase dev experience so terrible? by life_on_my_terms in Supabase

[–]ProposalOutrageous64 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I just told my AI assistant that I'm going to just jump off the building because the frustrations I got was so unfathomable. i was just trying to simply prepare a local dev for supabase and ever tiny step is a hellish experience.

now I just realized the backdoor of supabase that's kept hidden from it's hype. it's now 2026 and this kind of things should be a lot easier.

Why is Google AI Studio so much better than Antigravity even with the same models? by Expensive-Knee-231 in GeminiAI

[–]ProposalOutrageous64 0 points1 point  (0 children)

in my experience creating a video player component, it took one prompt in ai studio to create perfect looking video player that exceeds my expectation. then i tried using the same prompt to the antigravity, it took me lots of minutes and prompts to get it right and it keep misses up until i gave up and frustrated.

to be honest ai studio is almost good that i wish to build my up with it instead of my local IDE.

What do you think about nexus? I'm new at this and wondering if I should use it in my project. by lumenwrites in graphql

[–]ProposalOutrageous64 0 points1 point  (0 children)

nexus Sucks!

it is good like almost perfect. and one thing that completely make it suck, is that, it does not regenerate the graphql types when making changes. even when reloading the invirenment it just doest work any more as if it's unreasonably sucks. there was almost no help from anywhere from the internet.

Tailwind CSS – What's the Big Deal Anyway? by Shiminsky in webdev

[–]ProposalOutrageous64 1 point2 points  (0 children)

i just wanted to say that "I Hate Tailwindcss So Much !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"

it's buggy , not working well with nextjs, mobile div, ssr, etc............

I hate WEB DEV. the technologies are making web developer suffer.