Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | verelo's commentslogin

It's likely not all this, but i expect an element is: there is a meaningful number of people essentially refusing to work with AI.

Antidotal but I have spoken to friends at Google who are telling me many co-workers say "I tried it didn't work, ill do it myself" when really they just didn't try very hard at all.


That would be a stupid reason to fire someone when the jury is still out on the net productivity benefits of using AI to code at scale.

Sure, but would that really surprise you?

Edit: that is to say, if you had a % of your workforce avoiding helping you explore a current trend (valuable or not tbd sure), I can see rational arguments around removing them from the team.


If, as a member of the c-suite, I find that a noticeable percentage of my company's workforce isn't "helping to explorer a current trend" then either they know something I don't or I haven't given them the time/methods by which to explore.

The latter is actually the more pertinent item, as I've seen several times that an initiative get rolled out by leadership, some teams have free time to play around and use it, and other teams have so much on their plate that they're barely able to keep their heads above water, let alone take on another experiment. If someone is worried about getting a project knocked out by end of month/quarter/year in order to keep their job, they're not going to mess about.

Now, that's a leadership failure, but it happens more often than not.


Does it matter how someone gets their work done as long as its done on time? Why does using a specific tool matter?

To add to the speculation, it's possible that the people refusing to use it are working slower. Even if the code that they write is objectively better by any metric you'd like, humans can't really pump out code as fast as Claude or Codex can.

If you can get something into "good enough" territory in 1/10th the time of someone who can get it into "great" territory, that is often worth it.


I genuinely don't believe the rate at which you produce code matters.

Dude, the time for work is going down drastically, about a third of before. Are you not facing it?

If you're experiencing this you're either a very junior dev or you're not as senior as your title might suggest...

They’re not facing this. They’re just lying.

Dude, no I’m not. The bottle neck was never producing code.

Jesus that’s a bad looking status page lol it’s almost a rainbow


I mean the functionality of the page seems, acceptable? i more mean the actual outage history is wild.

See, now, if this was Reddit...this is the opportunity for a yo momma joke. But here we are on HN, so I'll just point out that this is the opportunity for a yo momma joke.

Yo mamma is so fat she broke the Coulomb barrier?

Well done.

Microslop*


Had a meeting with a friend the other day, discussing the 'times' and all that is happening around us.

I sit here thinking how wonderful and terrible of a time it is. If you can afford to sit in the stands and watch, it's exciting. There's never been so much change in such a short period of time. But if you're in the arena, or expecting to end up in the arena at some point, what terrifying moments lay ahead of you.

I never thought I'd say this, but I expect the arena is where I'll end up...I've enjoyed my time in the stands, but I'm running low on energy, capital and the will to keep trying.


Wait what does the arena stand for?


I see it as a metaphor for those who are having to battle to survive and those who are already retired or wealth enough not to care how things turn out. So i guess it could be job market, it could also be...a literal battlefield lol


Job market.


How absurd this is an option, but I’ll be using this config too.


Not only what files, but what part of the files. Seeing 1-6 lines of a file that's being read is extremely frustrating, the UX of Claude code is average at best. Cursor on the other hand is slow and memory intensive, but at least I can really get a sense of what's going on and how I can work with it better.


I am not a claude user, but a similar problem I see on opencode is accessing links. More than once I've seen Kimi, GLM or GPT go tothe wrong place and waste tokens until I interrupt them and tell them a correct place to start looking for documentation or whatever they were doing.

If I got messages like "Accessed 6 websites" I'd flip and go spam a couple github issues with as much "I want names" as I could.


> FWIW I think LLMs are a dead end for software development

Thanks for that, and it's worth nothing FYI.

LLMs are probably the most impressive machine made in recorded human existence. Will there be a better machine? I'm 100% confident there will be, but this is without a doubt extremely valuable for a wide array of fields, including software development. Anyone claiming otherwise is just pretending at this point, maybe out of fear and/or hope, but it's a distorted view of reality.


I'd love to learn more about your process of the sale. And in your graphs, is that attributed to profit/revenue in 2024?

I'm on a super similar journey. Started in 2022, did about 400k in revenue in 2025 at 79% margin, we'll se how this year goes. Theres a world where i'd love to add a lot of scale, but that'll rely on some experiments (underway) panning out. It's 'failure' in most peoples books but 2x'ing would be great too?!

How did you find a buyer? How did you come to a sale price? Why didn't you keep going?


> I'm on a super similar journey. Started in 2022, did about 400k in revenue in 2025 at 79% margin, we'll se how this year goes. Theres a world where i'd love to add a lot of scale, but that'll rely on some experiments (underway) panning out. It's 'failure' in most peoples books but 2x'ing would be great too?!

Nice, congrats!

Yeah, I think depending on what bubble you're in, bootstrapping to 400k and 2x'ing every few years is either failure or amazing. The VC/hypergrowth path doesn't appeal to me, so I think something that gives you $100k+/yr in profit is a huge success.

> I'd love to learn more about your process of the sale.

Sure, I wrote a couple of posts with the details.[0, 1]

[0] https://mtlynch.io/i-sold-tinypilot/

[1] https://mtlynch.io/lessons-from-my-first-exit/


Thanks for the reply. Just to clarify the picture for me, was the 2024 jump in profit attributing the sale or was that just a solid year?

Agreed on the 2x every year or two being a weird failure state. I've done both, and I'm at a junction point right now, but I really think a huge part of going all in on the VC route is finding the right money to work with. I've been mostly technical, hidden in dark places all my life. I love having the chance to be customer facing, i love the business side of my work, but doing that with the wrong backers is so unappealing i'd rather not have their money.

Edit: just skimmed your prior post (https://mtlynch.io/i-sold-tinypilot/). Great stuff, love the transparency!


> Thanks for the reply. Just to clarify the picture for me, was the 2024 jump in profit attributing the sale or was that just a solid year?

Mostly the sale. The deal closed in April, but Jan-March was an especially profitable quarter.[0]

[0] https://mtlynch.io/retrospectives/2024/04/


Do you do podcast interviews? Would love to dig into the no-VC/hypergrowth path as that's what I'm all about.


Yep, the place where I've talked about it the most has been The Software Misadventures Podcast.[0, 1]

[0] https://softwaremisadventures.com/p/michael-lynch-on-quittin... (2022, two years into the business)

[1] https://softwaremisadventures.com/p/michael-lynch-indie-hack... (2024, just after I sold)


I think scalemaxx is offering to interview you.


Oh, I'm open to that!


Yes indeed! What's the best place to reach out?


You can email me through the address here: https://mtlynch.io/about/


Thanks! Sent your way.


Love this. I have to say after 20 years of working in tech, I'm keen to retire to a world of chopping wood and gardening...but who knows, i guess winter will still keep me in doors when that happens.

Congrats on making it to retirement and keeping busy, hope you have a great time!


I am 4 months into a planned 6 month break. The plan was learn Spanish and do some traveling. After a month I started a side project and haven't focused on much else.

Years of the reward cycle being around shipping code is hard to override I guess.


Oh, I am doing a lot more than just hacking code. I am also cooking, gardening, reading, writing, travelling, brewing and distilling, swimming, volunteering, …


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: