| ▲ | marcus_holmes 5 hours ago | |||||||
that reference you give is pretty dated now, based on a talk from August which is the Beforetimes of the newer models that have given such a step change in productivity. The key change I've found is really around orchestration - as TFA says, you don't run the prompt yourself. The orchestrator runs the whole thing. It gets you to talk to the architect/planner, then the output of that plan is sent to another agent, automatically. In his case he's using an architect, a developer, and some reviewers. I've been using a Superpowers-based [0] orchestration system, which runs a brainstorm, then a design plan, then an implementation plan, then some devs, then some reviewers, and loops back to the implementation plan to check progress and correctness. It's actually fun. I've been coding for 40+ years now, and I'm enjoying this :) | ||||||||
| ▲ | indigodaddy 5 hours ago | parent [-] | |||||||
Can you bolt superpowers onto an existing project so that it uses the approach going forward (I'm using Opencode), or would that get too messy? | ||||||||
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