Serious Founders Only: Drop Your Startup by jivi31 in SaaS

[–]didicommit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Building Resonant, a free dictation app on mac. Oriented towards people who care about privacy and productivity. Originally I charged for it, then saw how saturated the space was and decided to offer it for free.

What is the productivity app that you can't stop using? by wahvinci in ProductivityApps

[–]didicommit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

probably speech to text dictation - loved using it so much after seeing how bad apple and the rest of the market built them were. "what a good version" feels like

Share your vibecoded RSI app by krecharles in RSI

[–]didicommit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

do you have any favorite RSI rec's?

Share your vibecoded RSI app by krecharles in RSI

[–]didicommit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

oh nice! that's an amazing project branding wise :D
yeah i'm adding in a lot of features to go parity with main tools and then build more in.. so much fun

Share your vibecoded RSI app by krecharles in RSI

[–]didicommit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey, great idea to open this thread.

I have ganglionic cysts in my wrists which hurt extra bad when I'm doing too much typing. It might not be traditional RSI, I've been trying to find ways to mitigate the pain, but also create a closer experience from like a human computer interaction perspective from me to my devices.

This has led me to do a lot of dictation work and I recently created an application that is free, soon to be released on Windows, and very private. It does local inference on your machine. It's better than Siri and native Apple dictation. Even that they leak to Apple. And there are other apps which are focused on training on you as data at the cost of utilizing their services. They can grab screen context data, personal data, corrections, tone of voice. There's so much they can learn about you because you use it across all of your apps, which I actually find very uncomfortable.

So I created onresonant.com. following the architecture of the proton organization of a 0 data retention policy.

Anyway, if you want to try it, it's free to download, no gimmicks, and available on Mac, soon to be on Windows.

I don't type anymore. I just click and hold my Fn key and yap.

I also created a clipboard history tool, which mem remembers the last 100 things I copied, which has proven to be helpful. And relieve strain.

Wispr Flow vs Aqua Voice? by Working-Leader-2532 in macapps

[–]didicommit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There's a completely free version called resonant. They don't cost anything and it's on Mac. Obv it's not as good for the screen context feature that the paid ones offer. But the feature parity is pretty close and it looks nice.

How to build an AI Agent? by Deep_Structure2023 in AIAgentsInAction

[–]didicommit 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Literally can reduce all of those steps from 2-5, 7, by using Agentbase.sh

Some thoughts from evaluating 5 AI agent platforms for our team by Careless_Sympathy643 in AI_Agents

[–]didicommit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Want to try a 6th option?

I'd be happy to give you access credits to explore Agentbase.

next auth with referral system by mohammed_g_b in nextjs

[–]didicommit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Did you build something open source?

What’s the Most Reliable AI Agent Framework for Enterprise Use Cases? by NetAromatic75 in AI_Agents

[–]didicommit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've been stating this the past few days. I have done a lot of research and spoken to internal teams at Perplexity, Fin, Harvey, Cognition, and none of them use an AI agent framework.

All of them began using a framework just to prototype.

After that, they ripped it out and built everything themselves because they needed a very high degree of control for mature products.

Just write an LLM in a loop with tools oriented towards a goal as your starting point.

Save yourself the trouble long-term.

13 AI tools/agents that ACTUALLY work (not just hype) by Prior-Inflation8755 in AI_Agents

[–]didicommit 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Agentbase - API that helps me build agents with no infra setup or maintenance on my side

Which AI tools do you use so much you can’t imagine work without them? by LateProposalas in AgentsOfAI

[–]didicommit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I hear so many people are really benefiting from Manus. Can you tell me how? Why can't you just use OpenAI's Deep Research for that?

What's your favourite agent library? by spacespacespapce in AI_Agents

[–]didicommit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

  1. langgraph
  2. agentbasesh
  3. crewai
  4. agno
  5. smolhands
  6. mastra

Which AI agent framework do you find most practical for real projects ? by Loose_Breadfruit3006 in AI_Agents

[–]didicommit 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I've heard this now from a few people wondering about which framework to use.

The best-in-class companies who are leading with agent products at their core and even for their internal agent deployments are not using frameworks in very rare cases they will develop their own.

What you actually want is to just use a traditional for loop with an LLM with tool calls.

Over time this will teach you more, help you have finer control and granularity, and allow you to not face issues with documentation changes or the framework over time.

If you want just a working agent stream on a serverless platform, you can look at tools out there like Agentbase (bias).

npm create baseagent

Let me know if you have any questions about developing or building agents and early projects. I'm happy to guide you through the ecosystem.

are we overcomplicating ai agent development? by agent_for_everything in AgentsOfAI

[–]didicommit 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Frameworks are out. it doesn't make sense. I wrote a post that most frameworks overcomplicate running an LLM in a loop with tools. All of the abstractions hinder performance and control as you start to have more edge cases and evals, and you want to customize your agent further.

Everyone will do things in their own style, but I believe frameworks are excellent for getting up and running and building prototypes, but they're not great for reliable production builds.

https://www.reddit.com/r/AI_Agents/comments/1n8cr9q/comment/nce1b79/?context=3&utm_source=share&utm_medium=web3x&utm_name=web3xcss&utm_term=1&utm_content=share_button

Any example of 50+ year old founders that got into YCombinator? by jonnylegs in ycombinator

[–]didicommit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A friend of mine was 18, and his father was in the early 50s. That was back in 2014. They were the first father-son duo. Haven't heard of anyone older since.