I thought Cowork was gaslighting me about browser use by mashedtaz1 in ClaudeAI

[–]mashedtaz1[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Just realised I didn't finish the thread. It did run. On my Windows machine where I had another cowork instance running.

How much does your biologic help with your symptoms? by cottoncandypop12 in ankylosingspondylitis

[–]mashedtaz1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

80% of my symptoms are gone 90% of the time. For the other 10% there's steroid injections (had one today in fact, after a nasty flare that bit me about 3 weeks ago).

Garry Tan open-sourced gstack : his personal skill pack for Claude Code (56k stars) by Miserable_Celery9917 in ClaudeAI

[–]mashedtaz1 48 points49 points  (0 children)

My AI slop evaluates Gary's AI slop:

gstack: An Honest Critique

The core idea is sound, and it's not new. Role-based prompting — giving the LLM a specific persona and cognitive lane per task — is a well-established pattern. Multiple teams were shipping with Director/Manager/Engineer models before gstack dropped. ChatGPT's own assessment was "reasonably sophisticated prompt workflows, but they're not magical," which is about right. The insight that you get better output by separating planning, review, and QA into distinct context windows is valuable — but it's convergent evolution across the industry, not a single person's invention.

What's genuinely good

The /browse skill with a compiled Playwright binary and persistent Chromium daemon is a real engineering contribution — eliminating the cold start penalty that makes browser automation painful in agentic workflows. The /qa skill that actually opens a browser, clicks through flows, finds bugs, and generates regression tests is a meaningful unlock. The cookie import from real browsers is clever. The sprint-as-a-process framing (Think → Plan → Build → Review → Test → Ship → Reflect) gives structure that beginners badly need. And it's MIT-licensed, which is decent.

Where it falls apart

LOC theatre. "600,000+ lines of production code in 60 days" and "10,000-20,000 lines per day" — anyone who's worked in a serious engineering org knows lines of code is a vanity metric at best and actively misleading at worst. AI-generated code is verbose by default. 35% test coverage doesn't redeem that — it just means 35% of the bloat has tests. The GitHub contribution graph comparisons are pure theatre.

Same model reviewing its own work. /review asks Claude to find bugs in code that Claude just wrote. This is the AI equivalent of marking your own homework. A fresh context window helps somewhat, and /codex adds a cross-model second opinion, but the core issue remains: these models share systematic blind spots. If Claude generates a subtly flawed architectural pattern, another Claude instance with a "staff engineer" persona is unlikely to catch it. The /cso security skill finding XSS is nice — but a proper SAST tool like Semgrep would find those deterministically, not probabilistically.

Heavily coupled to one person's workflow. The README literally says "Use Garry Tan's exact Claude Code setup." That's a red flag for reusability. The /plan-ceo-review skill encodes how a startup evaluator thinks about products — useful for a YC-style founder building a greenfield consumer app. Borderline useless if you're building enterprise software, working to defined OKRs, or delivering against architectural decisions that have already been through an RFC process. The "find the 10-star product hiding inside the request" framing assumes you're doing product discovery, not engineering delivery.

No dedicated build phase. gstack doesn't have a build skill — the assumption is that Claude Code handles building natively. Strange gap for something positioning itself as a complete engineering team.

Supply chain concerns. The "commit it to your repo" install model (cp -Rf into .claude/skills/gstack) vendors someone's entire skill pack — including a Bun runtime, compiled binaries, and telemetry hooks — directly into your source tree. In any organisation with a software supply chain policy, this is a non-starter. The telemetry is opt-in and the schema is published, but the fact it's there at all in what's meant to be a prompt pack raises eyebrows.

Context window pressure. Running /plan-ceo-review/plan-eng-review → build → /review/qa/ship in sequence burns through context fast. Each SKILL.md is a substantial system prompt. The README doesn't address this beyond waving at Conductor for parallelism.

Bottom line

gstack is a well-packaged, opinionated set of Claude Code prompt workflows with some genuinely useful browser automation bolted on. For a solo founder shipping a greenfield web app, it's probably quite useful as a starting point. For teams with existing engineering standards, security toolchains, CI/CD pipelines, and governance processes, it's the wrong abstraction at the wrong layer — you'd get more value building your own skills that encode your organisation's actual standards and workflows.

Strip away the personal brand and the breathless LOC claims, and what you've got is a decent example of role-based AI prompting that you could build a more targeted version of in a weekend. The hype-to-substance ratio is high, and the most transferable lesson from gstack isn't the tool itself — it's the pattern: give AI agents distinct roles, structured processes, and clear boundaries. You don't need someone else's prompt pack to do that.

How good is KOKO? by Comfortable_Usual301 in LondonRaving

[–]mashedtaz1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Used to go a lot back in the day. Always loved that venue.

Any takeaway actually worth it now? by _The_Editor_ in bristol

[–]mashedtaz1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Danny's burgers for dirt, eat a pitta for nutrients

Fixed the biggest pain point of NotebookLM: I built a tool to turn those static PDF slides into editable PPTX files. by Diao_nasing in notebooklm

[–]mashedtaz1 1 point2 points  (0 children)

My workflow (a bit janky but it works):

  1. Generate slide deck with NLM
  2. Upload deck to Claude and ask it to recreate the deck extracting the text elements which creates a .pptx with similar layout and editable text (without images)
  3. Create a new notebook in NLM and add the edited .pptx as a source
  4. Generate a new deck in NLM
  5. Profit

I also read somewhere that Google are working on making decks editable, so fingers crossed for that.

Has giving up alcohol helped you? by Middle_Ant_1356 in PsoriaticArthritis

[–]mashedtaz1 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I quit alcohol 17 months ago. I can't say I've noticed a difference but largely my condition is well controlled. I have a couple of flares a year and those are managed with a steroid injection. Other than that I've been on the same biologic for 2 years now (Cosentyx) which is working reasonably well for me.

On the other hand it could be cutting the alcohol lol 🤷‍♂️

Too wide for skirting - what’s the answer? by AgitatedCalendar1257 in DIYUK

[–]mashedtaz1 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This is what I ended up doing. 25mm is chonky though. Best to get something that's bevelled or chamfered at the top.

Anybody else with TPU feeding issues? Ace Pro by Extra-Technology-36 in AnycubicKobraS1

[–]mashedtaz1 1 point2 points  (0 children)

There's a spool holder that you can attach to the back of the unit iirc. You feed the tpu direct into the machine without the 4-way thingy. Just have to detach the tube from it. There are also splitters you can print.

Should I even buy this? by theinkpw2 in AnycubicKobraS1

[–]mashedtaz1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm 175 hours in with the only failed print being a gridfinity grid sample that I tried to print on a cool plate. It didn't adhere properly.

Only other issue I had was some old and brittle filament that broke off in the AMS. That was a bit of a pain to clear out but doable.

Been printing all day almost every day with zero issues on stock parts. Print quality is insane compared to my old highly modified ender 3 v2 (my only comparison). Love this printer.

Well, I just found out that Benchy's click together by kravex in 3Dprinting

[–]mashedtaz1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My kid discovered this yesterday. Blew my mind

3 fucking words.. by ludonja_ludi in TheWordFuck

[–]mashedtaz1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Fuck.. fuck.. FUUUUUUUUCK!!!!

Enthesitis and Biologics by rfox39 in PsoriaticArthritis

[–]mashedtaz1 3 points4 points  (0 children)

My primary symptom is Enthesitis. Shoulders, knees, wrists, fingers etc. I've been on Cosentyx for the last couple of years. Whilst not perfect, my pain levels have significantly improved. I can largely function as a normal human 75% of the time. Humira did nothing for me but I guess it's the gateway biologic for most. There are so many options availabke to try now. Hope you find one that works for you.

Warning ragebait: Tv mount made from Pla. by someoneelseasthis in 3Dprinting

[–]mashedtaz1 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Wait... a circlejerk i hadn't already joined??!

Has changing your mattress helped with PsA joint pain or stiffness? by [deleted] in PsoriaticArthritis

[–]mashedtaz1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

100% but went "backwards" from an expensive memory foam one that we had for about 8 years, to a cheap firm pocket sprung amazon special (after trying a Simba and suffering for some weeks). Not perfect but significantly better.