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

I tried it for few minutes and looks nice. One feedback, if you can add a selection tool to select multiple objects to perform a bulk action such as Delete, Color.


Thanks for the suggestion! I’ll look into it for a future release.


I was also facing the same issues with Claude Code. I am a macOS user and will let you know if I face any issues.


Took a quick look and I liked the it. I will be using it for my own saas applications.

Thanks for creating this project. Will give it a star.


The most famous example is Nextjs, which is a framework over a framework built over a framework.


Thank you for creating this project. I can use it to capture terminal recordings and display it on my saas website. It can also help in documentation for non tech users. Giving a star!


AI CEO, will you keep all the money or give all of it to your maker


I always wanted to make such a tool for myself but never sat to actually build it. User experience was a breeze.

I see that there is no import button. Adding Import will help many of us to keep editing the same tree instead of building it from scratch everytime. You can add a JSON export of the tree and then users can import this JSON to make edits. I can also share this JSON with other family members.


Thanks for the feedback! I’m glad the UX felt seamless—that was definitely the hardest part of the project.

Implementing JSON import/export is at the top of my roadmap for persistence: letting users "save" their progress locally without needing a cloud backend.

I’m working on the data schema for this right now. Stay tuned!


Great, keep us informed and let me know if any help is needed.


Cool project, this is my first time seeing such project using LLMs. Took me a while to understand what's happening on the home page.

A question though, why such powerful bots like Gemini 3.1 failed against Clowder bot? Is it because of inefficient code or the LLMs did not handle edge cases? Or they are not as good as humans when it comes to strategy.


I’m not sure honestly. It could be some combination of bad spatial reasoning of the LLMs and lack of any training data for this specific challenge.

You can see replays for all of the matches if you hover over the cells in the table.


I agree on the curiosity part, I have a non CS background but I have learned to program just out of curiosity. This led me to build production applications which companies actually use and this is before the AI era.

Now, with AI I feel like I have an assistant engineer with me who can help me build exciting things.


I'm currently teaching a group of very curious non-technical content creators at one of the firms I consult at. I set up Codex for them, created the repo to have lots of hand-holding built in - and they took off. It's been 4 weeks and we already have 3 internal tools deployed, one of which eliminated the busy work of another team so much that they now have twice the capacity. These are all things 'real' engineers and product managers could have done, but just empowering people to solve their own problems is way faster. Today, several of them came to me and asked me to explain what APIs are (They want to use the google workspace APIs for something)

I wrote out a list of topics/key words to ask AI about and teach themselves. I've already set up the integration in an example app I will give them, and I literally have no idea what they are going to build next, but I'm .. thrilled. Today was the first moment I realized, maybe these are the junior engineers of the future. The fact that they have nontechnical backgrounds is a huge bonus - one has a PhD in Biology, one a masters in writing - they bring so much to the process that a typical engineering team lacks. Thinking of writing up this case study/experience because it's been a highlight of my career.


This is the positive side of AI and that's inspiring. I have a friend who is into digital marketing but now he has automated most of the processes and moving towards learning to code at the side. Within a year I can say he is on par with a junior dev and now understands if I explain something technical.


Nice, now I can use this alongside claude to auto document my research work.

Also, what I find fascinating is that the repo was initialized 3 days ago so it seems it's still a work in progress.


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

Search: