I wanted to better markdown editor for collaborating with Claude/Codex and built Flashtype (https://github.com/opral/flashtype):
- opens local markdown files - Claude/Codex natively integrated (with my existing subscription!) - in-line diffing to quickly accept/reject changes - WYSIWYG (!)
The in-line diffs are a big step up to other apps static previews, and, in theory, just the first collaborative primitive.
But, I am getting feedback that "editing" might become a thing of the past. Why do I need to see diffs from Codex/Claude if the models are getting so good to the point that they need no correction?
Which makes me wonder, how did your writing setup with AI change over the past months? Are you still iterating on posts or are agents one shotting them?
by mrburton ·
1. Coding 2. TTS (Text to Speech) and STT (Speech To Text) 3. Image creation and understanding
For me I've been using:
1. qwen3-coder-next 2. Fish Audio S2 Pro (TTS) and Whisper for STT 3. Gemma for image analysis and Flux for creation.
I run these on my 16-inch MacBook Pro (Apple M5 Max chip with 18-core CPU, 40-core GPU, and 16-core Neural Engine ) with 128GB unified memory
Hey y'all! Long-time lurker here.
I love both posts mentioned in the title, and something that I never understood in this day and age of AI: why not combine both?!
If you posted on "Who wants to be hired?", you can search for your username and see the "best" matches (according to gemini-3.5-flash).
Very basic stack: Bun, Instant DB (just because I have been using them for the past few months and I love it!), and the HN api's.
Yeah, I could do it by hand, but no, I didn't. These types of "toy projects" bring me a lot of fun, and that is why I started in this career in the first place. :)
Happy to improve it if anyone finds it useful.