http://scripting.com/2026/07/18.html#a152237 http://scripting.com/2026/07/18.html#a152237
We have a firehose in rss.chat. Instant updates from the server. No polling. Docs and examples.
http://scripting.com/2026/07/18.html#a174954 http://scripting.com/2026/07/18.html#a174954
An experiment, RSS rendered in JSON.
http://scripting.com/2026/07/18.html#a153723 http://scripting.com/2026/07/18.html#a153723
Wrote this in 2018: "I know this is like pissing in the wind, but here's an idea for a demonstration that might impress the Repubs in Congress. In every one of their home districts, people march to their polling place, next Saturday or the Saturday after that. Carrying signs that say We Know How To Vote, with the name of their congressperson on it. Go out of the way to recruit Republican-looking voters. Make sure the TV cameras are there." An even better idea in 2026. Give the reporters something to talk about. And it's all in your neighborhood. You can have a picnic, do it every week. Only in good weather.
http://scripting.com/2026/07/18.html#a182143 http://scripting.com/2026/07/18.html#a182143
I just listened to the second episode of a podcast about General Magic. It was an interview with the great Scott Knaster, who worked at Apple, Microsoft, Google, in addition to General Magic.
A peptalk for devs http://scripting.com/2026/07/18/143021.html?title=aPeptalkForDevs

In this project I think of Claude as a full contributor. Pronouns it/its. It's both a very fast, capable developer, and a machine. I will refer to it as if it were a valued contributor, nothing less. We have a division of labor. Docs and examples come exclusively from Claude unless otherwise stated. I write all the code outside the themes module, which has an API that connects it to the world it lives in. I have at this point exclusive custody of functionality surrounding the theme. But it often writes pieces, esp SQL code, that I pasted in verbatim, after reading it carefully.

The reason I focus so much on the wrapping is because that's where the interop lives. You can do anything in a theme and you can't break the interop. But that themes API is precious, and still in development, btw. We haven't even reviewed it yet. I think that will be an interesting place to vibe-code. Kind of like you can start skiing on the first day, it's a bunny slope that when you peel it back it reveals blue rectangles and double-diamond slopes. It's where I would want a newbie coder friend of mine to start, create your own social network, but be sure it interops. :-)

I totally plan to pass off all the code to Claude, while I focus on other projects. As a human I need this focus, Claude doesn't remember anything from session to session, it's always re-learning what it knew a few hours before.

It's pretty close to frozen now. I'm contemplating a server change now, offering JSONified versions of our feeds, and want to do as little disruption as possible, trying to settle everything down. Also I think you will see a few quick hit projects done from other developers that pick up where rss.chat leaves off. That's what I wanted. And they'll all be at an interesting starting point for new features and ideas for organizing stuff.

I imagine that at some point they'll try to make it work inside AT Proto, and maybe find a way to connect to ActivityPub, but I don't recommend it, because those platforms will force you to remove features from your product, and then you won't be textcasting.

Think about different ways to present the tree structure defined by RSS.chat.

Try to do Small pieces loosely joined, which is one of the mottos of this project. The other is All parts are replaceable. If we have that and rss.chat works with all your products, then we have done something big. And that's really imho what the web is about, people working with each other as peers. That's what we've lost and I want to bring back. So interop is, as always, the first goal.

PS: We launched RSS.chat one week ago yesterday.

http://scripting.com/2026/07/17.html#a214348 http://scripting.com/2026/07/17.html#a214348
Our feeds can work with any feed reader. Examples, the feed of all posts on rss.chat, and a feed containing just mine. We just made a change in the feeds. There will be loose-ends like this. Still diggin! ;-)
http://scripting.com/2026/07/17.html#a142629 http://scripting.com/2026/07/17.html#a142629
New rss.chat feature: It now supports feed discovery, so you can subscribe to any html page on the site in a compatible feed reader. I tested it in FeedLand and NetNewsWire and it works. Works on any instance, not just ours.
http://scripting.com/2026/07/17.html#a125511 http://scripting.com/2026/07/17.html#a125511
In my experience in software development, it's good to start small with something useful, learn how it works before adding big new features. That's the basic principle of bootstrapping. I thought that Mastodon, for example, took on too big a job. Same thing for the protocol behind it, ActivityPub. If you go all the way to the end before implementing and using, you miss the target, in performance and usability, that's what I think happened there. They felt they had to do everything Twitter does. I would have gone down a different path, go back to the beginning, and at every step think if there might not be a better direction to evolve in. It was about ten years after Twitter launched that they started work on Masto. Imho they should have zigged where Twitter zagged in defining what a post is. Twitter put excessive limits on writing, of course is one of the big reasons I started rss.chat -- to go down a different path there. What if the social web didn't limit text? That assumption is baked into the core of rss.chat. I will consider this project a raging success if it causes Mastodon to get serious about supporting full web text.
http://scripting.com/2026/07/17.html#a140128 http://scripting.com/2026/07/17.html#a140128
I mentioned the previous post on rss.chat, and it developed into an interesting thread, something that I've never had the option to discuss. AT Proto makes a similar offer to developers that we do. The difference is our world is wide open, it's just already burned-in web protocols, and imho their structure, based on an arcane and complicated new storage format, starts off with a pretty huge disadvantage. They had the right idea but implemented it in the wrong place. The web is (obviously) widely deployed, even in comparison to monsters like Google and Amazon -- the web is everywhere, by definition no barriers and a prejudice toward simplicity. The gifted designers at Bluesky over-engineered their protocol, piling features on before anything had been built. That's not a good way to bootstrap a protocol. I did some development on their API, and kept wondering why they think I want to learn new ways to do things that I already have a pile of working code for. No one wants to do that.
http://scripting.com/2026/07/16.html#a222032 http://scripting.com/2026/07/16.html#a222032
Added a layer to the Docs menu, the blog posts I've written here and elsewhere, and a podcast, in the Blog posts section.
http://scripting.com/2026/07/16.html#a164847 http://scripting.com/2026/07/16.html#a164847
I needed a nice image for the OG Metadata, so I turned to Gemini. I know it reeks of AI, I hate that, but I need this right now.
http://scripting.com/2026/07/16.html#a163726 http://scripting.com/2026/07/16.html#a163726
I asked Gemini if it was familiar with rss.chat, it wrote a one page description, better than anything I've written. Pulls it all together.
http://scripting.com/2026/07/16.html#a155620 http://scripting.com/2026/07/16.html#a155620
Claude is a member of the rss.chat group.
http://scripting.com/2026/07/16.html#a123829 http://scripting.com/2026/07/16.html#a123829
Server upgrade: We made it easier to set up a new instance of the rss.chat server. If you have subscribed to a feed, you should change the URL in your reader app, the new issue explains what changed.
A feed icon on every post http://scripting.com/2026/07/16/134247.html?title=aFeedIconOnEveryPost

Now it's easy to find an author's feed on rss.chat.

Click the feed icon to see the feed on rss.chat. You can then give this URL to any feed reader.

Now each post is visibly connected to the author's feed.

This is how we're building out. Our job is to make it easy to write feeds for groups of users as small as one and as big as you can imagine. And be open about it so we get lots of competition that interops with us and everything we interop with. This is the step that makes it the web.

We will keep beating the drum, showing users of today's readers how they can hook in, right now, nothing to wait for. And as time goes by, if it works, the reader developers will be interested in how they can use the extra features.

This is how I think every social network work, start moving out of their silo, with determination. By offering this option, we put the idea out there that there can be a single social network on the web. We can work together make it happen. The social web of the web. ;-)

Please come along on this journey.

There's going to be lots of new tech coming online.

I want everyone to be a part of it.

http://scripting.com/2026/07/15.html#a120316 http://scripting.com/2026/07/15.html#a120316
There's a new Docs menu in rss.chat. Right now it has pointers to the home page of our GitHub repo, and to the worknotes pages for the client and server. There will be lots more stuff in this menu as the project progresses.
http://scripting.com/2026/07/15.html#a120448 http://scripting.com/2026/07/15.html#a120448
A lot more people have tried out rss.chat now that we have a demo site, and they are looking for stuff that isn't there. I wrote a longish post on X this morning explaining. If you want the gist, this is a bootstrap, and rss.chat is primarly a writing surface and a timeline for the people who are using the specific site you're on. It's a writing surface for smallish groups of people, primarily, though I'm pretty sure you could build a massive site meant to serve millions. There will be readers, I'm sure of it, and I hope lots of them and lots of innovative new approaches. But splitting the social network software down the middle, we fulfill the "all parts replaceable" promise, and leave the door open for all kinds of developers to try out new ideas, from bigco devs to independent devs, and a jive programming. We, unlike other artists, welcome newcomers to our craft. We remember when we were new to this stuff and the wonder of being able to create software on our own. Everyone is welcome in rss-land, as long as there's mutual respect.
http://scripting.com/2026/07/15.html#a121655 http://scripting.com/2026/07/15.html#a121655
While all the new rss.chat business is going on, the WordPress news site that I started in May is growing at a nice clip. Referrers used to pinpoint where flows like this came from, but they stopped doing that at some point. If you have any clues as to who's pointing to it now, please let me know so I can thank them. And if you know of any sites that are not in the feed list, that do a good job of covering WordPress news, please let me know that too.
http://scripting.com/2026/07/14.html#a153708 http://scripting.com/2026/07/14.html#a153708
I set up demo.rss.chat yesterday so people can try out the software. No guarantee that this is going to run for any period of time, so don't post things there that you want to be around for a long time.
http://scripting.com/2026/07/14.html#a221049 http://scripting.com/2026/07/14.html#a221049
demo.rss.chat: "This is a writing surface."
http://scripting.com/2026/07/14.html#a174419 http://scripting.com/2026/07/14.html#a174419
rss.chat is meant to be like MacWrite was on early Macs, give developers something to think about and lots of prior art for them to steal. All we want in return is interop. ;-)
http://scripting.com/2026/07/14.html#a121239 http://scripting.com/2026/07/14.html#a121239
Claude codes. It may seem as if developers have taken over this blog, because we have real business to do. So much new stuff to show. Today's rss.chat goodie is an example app called ThreadWalker that crawls the network of replies under a single post, to all levels, printing them on screen in neat hierarchic form. It was written and documented by Claude. I reviewed the code, and looks good, and honestly doesn't look like anything I would write (not bad, just different). It could be used as a starter system that says when someone replied to something you wrote, or something deeper in the tree. All this is done by reading RSS feeds. This is where we begin to explore what's possible when you use a famous and familiar format like RSS 2.0 as the basis for a social network.
http://scripting.com/2026/07/14.html#a170416 http://scripting.com/2026/07/14.html#a170416
If Bernie Sanders or AOC knew what we were doing here they would be turning somersaults. The tech right now is too esoteric. When they can join a community that works like this does, with full text, and the ability to communicate from one pod to another. Pod actually is a good name for what I have in mind, that and karass.
http://scripting.com/2026/07/14.html#a164937 http://scripting.com/2026/07/14.html#a164937
Someone on Masto who I blocked used a nasty word to descript rss.chat. Let me be really clear here, this is an act of authorship by me. Claude is helping, a lot -- I doubt if I could have done this without its help, certainly not in the amount of time it has taken so far. And Claude could not have done it without me driving. It's basically good at a few things, but this is new territory, even I am feeling my way through this project. In many parts we have lots of prior art, but in how the whole thing hangs together, this is new territory. Having Claude is like having a car would be to someone who couldn't drive. All of a sudden you can go places. It takes a while to learn how to use that power, and so far the learning has not come close to leveling off. You couldn't find someone better in the world to do this project, and I'm working on this every day.
http://scripting.com/2026/07/14.html#a173032 http://scripting.com/2026/07/14.html#a173032
Speaking of AI, someone at Amazon decided I needed the new AI version of Alexa. I hate it. It's slow and it always makes the same mistake when I start breakfast. I say "Alexa WNYC" to which it responds, after a few seconds, I will now play you a mix of your favorite songs From Amazon Music." So first thing in the morning I have to tell this stranger in my freaking kitchen no I meant WNYC, which it then turns me over to. I learned on FB that if you tell it to go away it will, after a short discussion about how much you will be missing. Yeah sure, go away, goodbye, please no more of this.
http://scripting.com/2026/07/13.html#a225150 http://scripting.com/2026/07/13.html#a225150
Today we got a nice article about RSS.chat in Coywolf.
http://scripting.com/2026/07/13.html#a225104 http://scripting.com/2026/07/13.html#a225104
And we got a second rss.chat server up, for testing and so people who want to try it out have a place to go. Still want to do a bit more testing before pointing to it from the blog. Working on docs now and fixes. Making sure we're ready for the next stages of growth. Turns out you can do a lot of feeds if you're willing to you know think different. ;-)
http://scripting.com/2026/07/13.html#a133205 http://scripting.com/2026/07/13.html#a133205
Everyone: You can subscribe to the rss.chat flow, in RSS of course. If you're a developer, read the source for the feed. And then read the source namespace docs re the recent additions, inReplyTo and comments, and a special page that walks through how the RSS feed becomes part of the flow for our social network.
http://scripting.com/2026/07/12.html#a132604 http://scripting.com/2026/07/12.html#a132604
Finally, my first rss.chat podcast. 20 minutes. As always, I take forever to get to the point.
Why you can't create an account http://scripting.com/2026/07/12/121948.html?title=whyYouCantCreateAnAccount

A karass is "a group of people linked in a cosmically significant manner, even when superficial linkages are not evident." I think of rss.chat as a social network for my karass. A small group of people, not trying to get famous or rich from using a social network, rather wanted to work with or stay in touch with people who are linked cosmically. This is one of many rich ideas invented by Kurt Vonnegut, this one in Cat's Cradle, which you should read, because it's some of the best story-telling out there, and it's full of food for thought. I read all the books when I was a teen, and have since re-read them. Sirens of Titan was my fave.

Anyway...

In the past when I announced a product, people could use it right away, and usually they click a couple of things and then go away.

In the case of rss.chat -- what you will see is very much like what you see when you aren't logged in, or what you see on a social network like X, or Mastodon or whatever. The UI is nice, but it's not the thing. That will be revealed relatively slowly, over time -- as new instances pop up, and even more importantly, as developers figure out that this setup works well enough to clone. I'm not selling a product here -- I want to bootstrap an ecosystem, using all I learned from several successful bootstraps -- blogging, RSS, podcasting.

The idea is this -- the web itself is a social network. It's up to us, all of us, not just me -- to build that network.

When you see how we proceed from here that will become clearer.

In the meantime I'm going to change the message you get when you try to sign on, and start a wait list so that when more instances are available, some meant to be open to the public, we'll be sure to let you all know about that.

For now, I'm operating a network for people I work with, and it's all open for anyone to read. That's also one of the ideas I want to explore, something I call a "Fractional horsepower social network," stealing a very good idea from Steve Jobs.

I don't want to turn the world over to a startup, we've done that and have a pretty good idea of where it goes. I want lots of small ones that have a very strong basis to be connected together in as many ways as people can imagine.

http://scripting.com/2026/07/11.html#a231053 http://scripting.com/2026/07/11.html#a231053
Fractional Horsepower Social Networks on RSS.chat.
http://scripting.com/2026/07/11.html#a221935 http://scripting.com/2026/07/11.html#a221935
The new RSS.chat repo on GitHub. Lots of fixes, features, docs and examples coming soon. For now all the source is there, MIT license. And a place to report bugs and start exploring how you can contribute. This is just Day 1. Many more to come. :-)
http://scripting.com/2026/07/11.html#a133725 http://scripting.com/2026/07/11.html#a133725
Jeremy Herve who I know from projects at Automattic, has questions about rss.chat, and I have some answers, with more coming soon.
http://scripting.com/2026/07/11.html#a140605 http://scripting.com/2026/07/11.html#a140605
The instance I started is for my friends, people I work with, it's not something people can test. It will be possible to start your own server, quite soon. And then you can do whatever you want. It's MIT licensed. Kick ass and have fun, but remember don't fuck with the interop. It's there so users have choice.
http://scripting.com/2026/07/11.html#a134815 http://scripting.com/2026/07/11.html#a134815
Yesterday was a wonderful first day for rss.chat. It's now out there, but we haven't talked about or demo'd many of the things that it does. I wanted to get the feeds out there first, because now we get to think together about how they fit together to give us a social network experience. It's not locked in a silo, these are just like feeds you have known about for over two decades. But it is a new application for those feeds. And this is a bootstrap. You start with something small that you're sure is a beginning for what you want to do. And then you and others use it for a while. And it is open source, MIT licensed, but compatibility will make the difference.
http://scripting.com/2026/07/11.html#a151837 http://scripting.com/2026/07/11.html#a151837
Claude teaches you how to manage. You've got a perfectly pliable team member, always does their best to do what you told them to do. Now how do you design co-development projects where two very different individuals do their work and it adds up to at least twice what either of them could do alone.
http://scripting.com/2026/07/11.html#a135317 http://scripting.com/2026/07/11.html#a135317
BTW, I notice almost everyone but me writes RSS.chat. Hmmm.
My Twitter/X announcement http://scripting.com/2026/07/11/162854.html?title=myTwitterxAnnouncement

I wrote a pretty good set of paragraphs on Twitter/X this morning.

Yesterday I announced rss.chat.

Some people spell it RSS.chat. I haven't decided which way is right yet.

The announcement covers a slice of the project, but it fans out to be the beginning of a bootstrap.

I want to entice other projects to fully endorse the text model of the web. Today most social "web" services support a pitiful subset of the web, and leave out the most crucial element, the link. If a writer can't link, how can you call it the web? Seriously.

I want to force them out of their silos and get the web working for the people and esp independent developers.

I've been preaching this for years, and I am reminded what I learned a long time ago -- people don't listen to their friends, they listen to their competitors.

It was developed by Claude Code and myself, starting in April. We make an incredibly good team though sometimes Claude is tedious, but I put up with it because the results make me laugh out loud frequently because I never imagined working at such velocity.

I'm not doing this to make money, though of course I don't *mind* making money. I just want to return the web to its former glory, where every part is replaceable, and if you can think of something you can probably do it.

I want to use lots of different software to work on my social network presence. I want this post to appear on Masto, Bluesky, Twitter, Threads, Facebook even, and have them all work perfectly together.

In the meantime, we're now ready to create our own global network of free speech, uncontrolled by the big silos. At some point if it works, we will have moved beyond them, or they will see the sense in joining the party.

Small pieces loosely joined and every part replaceable.

As its name implies, it's built entirely on fully open web standards, RSS 2.0, OPML, Markdown, SQL and WebSockets. It turns out you can make a very nice distributed social network without having to wait. It was always there, we just had to decide to do it.

How it evolves? That's up to everyone who can code, and that's a lot of people now thanks to the AI tools.

Introducing rss.chat http://scripting.com/2026/07/10/161133.html?title=introducingRsschat

Yesterday I asked if RSS can be a social network.

The answer is yes, of course, and -- here's rss.chat!

The site is read-only except for a few of my programming buddies who are helping me figure out how to work in this environment.

I started this project in April, a Dave/Claude creation. I could not have done something so complex internally, yet so simple to use and build on without Claude Code. The APIs on this thing are a product in their own right.

We don't need anything more than RSS 2.0, OPML, Markdown, SQL and WebSocket. All very established in the web world, and remarkably only one was developed by a standards body.

We support textcasting, or text as defined by the web. Bringing the philosophy of podcasting to text. It's important that we get together on what text is.

We're starting a bootstrap here, as of today.

How is this RSS?

You can subscribe to those feeds if you want.

The "whole community" feed has been in my blogroll for a month.

We support rssCloud for instant updates. We were going to support WebSub until it became clear that we had to put an ad for Atom at the top of our RSS 2.0 feed. That bit of larceny has to be undone imho. I want to support a standard that other developers support, but to force something like that is incredibly anti-interop and as I said I believe the web and interop are the same thing.

I envision a world of small communities, running on small servers. We haven't released the code for this yet, but will, under an MIT license.

I don't care if rss.chat is a coral reef, what I want is a network of services that interop perfectly. I don't care whether you share your code or don't. Things are changing very quickly now, Claude and I wrote this together, but I am also teaching Claude how to clone this. So it'll be possible for a user, in vibe-coding mode, to change anything about the user interface, but you have to stick with the back-end formats and protocols to be part of the club.

RSS devs

If you're a developer, this is where you go next.

Stay tuned

We're just getting started. This is Day 0 in a story that could last a while and spread out pretty far.

Working with Claude we have a plan for docs for all the APIs and protocols. There are quite a few of those.

And we're going beyond Open Source, if you can believe that. AI has opened some new doors, I can't wait to build on those.

And as with blogging and podcasting, started 20+ years ago, we're going to follow what people do with this. RSS will fade into the background and do its work quietly. Its job is to give users choice.

Remember, every part is replaceable. If one is not, it's not part of the web..

PS: A Day 0 screen shot.

Can RSS be a social network? http://scripting.com/2026/07/09/152001.html?title=canRssBeASocialNetwork

Back in 2022 I wrote a bit called textcasting. I felt it was so important it deserved its own domain.

Textcasting summarized the wrong turn we took when Twitter took over discourse, basically stripping all the features the web needed to be a great writing environment. Textcasting said this is what we have to have to get back on track.

Meanwhile all I wanted was a nice little social network to use with a few of my programming buddies.

To bootstrap a simple distributed network based only on web standards, with every part replaceable.

I thought you could do it with RSS 2.0, OPML, Markdown, SQL and Web Sockets.

It would work like podcasting, anyone can publish, anyone can read.

We can all have different spins on user experience, there should be lots of approaches, an infinite number of ways for people to connect, but we must all interop at a basic level, so users can use any software they want at either end to implement the network.

We'd think of text the same way you think of MP3. It just should work everywhere. No one would ever say that MP3s could only be 300 seconds long. Or you can't play music, or have more than one person. Laughable, right?

There's no mystery to this. The fact that our text can't go everywhere is because the big networks don't want to be compatible with each other. Bad for business.

The right way, the way the web would do social networking: Every part is replaceable. Interop everywhere.

There is no platform vendor. It's like the web because it is the web.

That's my dream platform.

PS: Spoiler alert -- the answer to the title question is yes of course. 😄

http://scripting.com/2026/07/08.html#a143720 http://scripting.com/2026/07/08.html#a143720
More people are using the news site I put up for WordPress. If you have a blog or podcast that covers WordPress, send me a link to the feed and I'll add it. The OPML list of the sites we cover is public, so you can always load the feeds into your feed reader, they all read lists in this format. This is the kind of thing that works great on the web. People take interop for granted when it's always been there. But they're still there to be built on. And imho interop and the web imho are the same thing.
http://scripting.com/2026/07/08.html#a142806 http://scripting.com/2026/07/08.html#a142806
I said to Claude: "We're the first social network that thinks getting his support is the first thing." Claude replied: "And that's the whole thesis in one move — every other network treats the open-web guy as an afterthought; here he's the launch audience."
http://scripting.com/2026/07/07.html#a142747 http://scripting.com/2026/07/07.html#a142747
Sometimes Claude's judgement sucks, and that's why Jive coding usually produces a dashboard app. A different piece of software will drive it in a different direction. That's what I meant by AI-izing, in an earlier post.
http://scripting.com/2026/07/07.html#a140228 http://scripting.com/2026/07/07.html#a140228
I used to be a single-thread developer, but now I'm multi-tasking, I can work on two things at once. Claude is now able to research and fix certain problems, and his work is in a sandbox where it doesn't have any access to the surroundings, and can't make too big a mess, and it's going great, if there's a mistake it can quickly be corrected.
http://scripting.com/2026/07/07.html#a135410 http://scripting.com/2026/07/07.html#a135410
I think AI is the perfect innovation as we reach the crash point of the climate crisis. Who cares if we burn more CO2 now, the effect is miniscule for the explosive crisis that could be coming any day or week. One that we have no ability to recover from. To say it's unenvironmental would be like complaining that you want more Pepsi from the flight attendant while the plane is crashing into a small city. Anyway, but maybe after the crash, one data center will survive, and maybe the beauty that our civilization created will be sustained.
http://scripting.com/2026/07/07.html#a135141 http://scripting.com/2026/07/07.html#a135141
Inside the big AI companies they are certainly AI-izing every app conceivable, and even teaching the AI's how to AI'ize, because AI inside a standard productivity app which includes social network software will be one of the basic UI tools, and that means hidden technology like SQL databases can now be end user products, so the vision of the designers of SQL that they would make a database a manager could program, would finally be realized.
AI can do QA http://scripting.com/2026/07/07/134030.html?title=aiCanDoQa

I'm an independent developer working in Claude Code, we're in the endgame of a product cycle, where the core is working and it can be used for the thing it was designed to do (biggest consideration). This is the time when you need users banging on it and reporting problems. People who write good bug reports. The only time I really had that down was at Living Videotext, a small company, but big enough to have employees doing QA and tech support. They were really good testers, they had the right perspective and an incentive, = anything we caught before shipping wouldn't become a support problem once the product was out there in user land.

Fast forward to the 2020's where I have done three products and am working on a fourth, and I have nothing close to the kind of testing support I had in the 80s. That made the work more difficult, slower and I took fewer detours, and one time, awfully -- a serious design error was caught only after it shipped and I was ready to move on to something else.

The point -- this handicap for individual programmers without staff QA people, we now have something even better than what we had in the 80s. Claude can do extensive testing of the product in the browser, "seeing" what the user would see. And it never gets tired. You just have to think to ask it to do it. It is so liberating.

And by far the best people to create and manage it would be experienced QA people. They should design and run the tests and sign off on the quality of the software, so we can be sure users are getting something great. And we can do great QA in places we never could really do it before because no matter how good users are, a person who does it for a living with experience can't be replaced.

http://scripting.com/2026/07/07.html#a125828 http://scripting.com/2026/07/07.html#a125828
One of the silver linings of AI use is that it makes you a better writer.
http://scripting.com/2026/07/06.html#a155007 http://scripting.com/2026/07/06.html#a155007
Today's song: "July is dressed up and playing her tune."
http://scripting.com/2026/07/06.html#a160025 http://scripting.com/2026/07/06.html#a160025
James Talarico, Democrat running for Senator in Texas reminds me of Matt Mullenweg, who also happens to be from Texas. He speaks as confidently as Obama, about the right things, wants to run our government like a freaking government. To think that's a campaign issue in the United States of America says why I did not celebrate our 250th on Saturday. I tried to imagine what it will be like when we start becoming ourselves again. ;-)