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Early dopamine disruption in entorhinal cortex knock-in model of Alzheimer's dis

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41593-026-02260-w
1•bookofjoe•1m ago•0 comments

AI smart glasses will help visually impaired runners take on the London Marathon

https://apnews.com/article/london-marathon-ai-smart-glasses-5ab4dab11759a42fef0450c7c16bfb25
1•geox•4m ago•0 comments

Agency – A Language to Build Agents

https://agency-lang.com/
1•mesto1•5m ago•0 comments

What Happens When the Attribution Cartel Meets Advertising's Halo Effect?

https://www.adexchanger.com/data-driven-thinking/what-happens-when-the-attribution-cartel-meets-a...
1•dmarti•7m ago•1 comments

Generate Apple and Google Wallet Passes from Laravel

https://freek.dev/3108-generate-apple-wallet-and-google-wallet-passes-from-laravel
1•abdelhousni•7m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Harmonic Progression Podcast on Humans, AI and Tech News

https://open.spotify.com/episode/0Q03ytkssZxw2YUKzwUkKZ
1•vednig•7m ago•0 comments

Monstrous octopus terrorized seas off B.C. in Age of Dinosaurs, study suggests

https://www.cbc.ca/news/science/giant-octopus-fossil-9.6956377
1•Brajeshwar•7m ago•0 comments

Why is nobody talking about Oracle's imminent demise?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NHtGXCWXyZs
1•JCW2001•7m ago•1 comments

Honolulu's Airport Has AI Theme Songs. The Internet Is Divided

https://www.civilbeat.org/2026/04/honolulu-airport-has-ai-theme-songs-the-internet-is-divided/
1•SLHamlet•9m ago•0 comments

Project Deal

https://www.anthropic.com/features/project-deal
2•meetpateltech•10m ago•0 comments

Dutch Navy frigate tracked by mailing it a Bluetooth tracker

https://www.theregister.com/2026/04/17/dutch_navy_frigate_tracked/
1•janandonly•10m ago•0 comments

I built a multi-agent research tool and opened early access

https://neiro.it/
1•hsnrique•11m ago•0 comments

Positivity by George Hotz

https://geohot.github.io//blog/jekyll/update/2026/04/24/positivity.html
2•jshchnz•14m ago•0 comments

Palantir Is Helping Trump's IRS Conduct "Massive-Scale" Data Mining

https://theintercept.com/2026/04/24/palantir-irs-contract-data/
1•cdrnsf•14m ago•0 comments

Giving LLMs a Formal Reasoning Engine for Code Analysis

https://yogthos.net/posts/2026-04-08-neurosymbolic-mcp.html
1•fogus•16m ago•0 comments

Anthropic Banned My Claude Account [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=03wgVlCKKVg
1•panchtatvam•18m ago•0 comments

A free solution to the GitHub Actions supply chain crisis

https://developerwithacat.com/blog/202604/github-actions-supply-chain-commit/
1•mmarian•20m ago•0 comments

Recycling Uranium: A Practical Guide

https://arenamagazine.substack.com/p/recycling-uranium-a-practical-guide
1•crescit_eundo•21m ago•1 comments

git replay – EXPERIMENTAL: Replay commits on a new base, for bare repos too

https://git-scm.com/docs/git-replay
1•eevilspock•22m ago•0 comments

Pact: Trustworthy Coordination for Multi-Agentic Ecosystems

https://www.basis.ai/blog/choreographies/
1•gopiandcode•22m ago•0 comments

git history – EXPERIMENTAL: Rewrite history

https://git-scm.com/docs/git-history
1•eevilspock•23m ago•0 comments

Bot Tool

https://github.com/ghostintheprompt/bot_toll
1•ghstinda•26m ago•0 comments

Seed-strapping: Skipping Seed to raise at Series A

https://sheetventure.com/fundraising-knowledge/what-determines-skipping-seed-funding-for-series-a
2•ageospatial•27m ago•0 comments

Session replay, custom dashboards, and RUM in self-hosted Umami v3.1

https://hmmr.online/posts/umami-v3-1-0-review/
1•ZanderHammer•27m ago•0 comments

Tariffs Raised Consumers' Prices, but the Refunds Go Only to Businesses

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/24/us/politics/companies-consumers-tariff-refunds.html
2•duxup•27m ago•1 comments

Anthropic reveals changes to Claude's operating instructions caused degradation

https://venturebeat.com/technology/mystery-solved-anthropic-reveals-changes-to-claudes-harnesses-...
1•vednig•30m ago•0 comments

Aperture beta: better controls for the AI agent era

https://tailscale.com/blog/aperture-public-beta
1•Brajeshwar•30m ago•0 comments

termscp: a feature rich terminal UI file transfer and explorer

https://github.com/veeso/termscp
1•indigodaddy•31m ago•0 comments

85% of enterprises are running AI agents. Only 5% trust them enough to ship

https://venturebeat.com/security/85-of-enterprises-are-running-ai-agents-only-5-trust-them-enough...
2•vednig•31m ago•1 comments

The Download: supercharged scams and studying AI healthcare

https://www.technologyreview.com/2026/04/24/1136400/the-download-supercharged-scams-questionable-...
1•joozio•33m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

My 600 Hours with AI Coding Assistants: A Practical Comparison

2•bv_dev•11mo ago
After spending over 600 hours using various AI coding assistants over the past 3 months, I wanted to share my experience for those navigating this rapidly evolving landscape.

What I Mean by "Agentic Mode" First, to clarify: by "agentic mode," I'm referring to the assistant's ability to understand project context, reason through multi-step problems, and autonomously make coherent code changes across files without constant hand-holding. True agency means the tool can maintain context across interactions and execute on high-level directions.

The Current Landscape (May 2025) Augment Code - Current go-to tool despite higher costs

Strengths: Maintains context remarkably well across complex refactors; actually understands project structure; can implement feature requests that span multiple files Weaknesses: More expensive than alternatives ($30/month vs $20 for others); occasional hallucinations when venturing outside codebase context Best for: Complex refactoring tasks and implementing features that span multiple files

Windsurf - Slightly edges out Cursor for agentic capabilities

Strengths: Better context retention than Cursor; decent file traversal; good understanding of code relationships Weaknesses: Can get quite stuck in their full agentic mode as it starts editing things. While they have removed their flow credits part, it is still painful to watch it go completely out of context. Best for: Mid-size projects where you need moderate autonomy

Cursor - Popular but underwhelming for true agentic work

Strengths: Good IDE integration; clean interface; works reasonably well for single-file tasks. I like the ability to Cmd+K and insert a bulk of code in the middle. Also, I like the @Docs feature to bring latest documentation for popular libraries.

Weaknesses: Context falls apart in agentic mode; often loses track of previous instructions; requires excessive prompting Best for: Single-file optimizations and modifications, but not complex cross-file tasks

Claude Code - Declining quality since public beta

Strengths: Used to have superior reasoning and contextual understanding 3 months ago Weaknesses: Super expensive (like always), but recent updates have significantly degraded agentic capabilities; now requires much more hand-holding than before as it goes compleltely off base. Best for: Simple tasks that don't require deep contextual understanding Note: Most disappointing decline in quality - was previously much more capable. I spent $500 in Feb-Mar and thought it was worth.

Cline, Roo, and Aider - Conceptually interesting but practically limited

Strengths: Cline has good terminal integration; Roo offers interesting visualization; Aider has straightforward CLI Weaknesses: All three struggle with maintaining context; limited understanding of project structure; frequent need to repeat instructions Best for: Very simple, isolated coding tasks or experiments

Real-world Performance Differences The gap between these tools becomes most apparent when trying to implement complex features. For example, when asked to "add user authentication with email verification to my Express app":

Augment Code: Identified relevant files, added middleware, routes, and email service integration, then explained how the pieces fit together Windsurf/Cursor: Added authentication to single files I pointed at but needed explicit instructions for each additional component Others: Generally required file-by-file guidance with frequent context reminders

Conclusion If budget isn't a concern, Augment Code currently offers the most truly agentic experience, but still has a long way to go. For more budget-conscious developers, Windsurf slightly edges out Cursor for agentic capabilities, though both still require significant guidance for complex tasks.

Comments

SoMomentary•11mo ago
I'm always surprised by people sleeping on GitHub Copilot. Is this because people truly don't find any value in it?
bv_dev•11mo ago
I have used Github copilot since their beta release in 2023 and I don't find it anywhere near good these days. Automplete was good, but the industry has moved way beyond 2025. Copilot is slightly worse than Cursor which is itself a pretty average tool now. If you use truly agentic code generation, you won't be able to go back to Github Copilot.
SoMomentary•11mo ago
You don't consider copilots agent mode to be agentic? I've had some pretty great results with agent mode + mcp to have it check it's own work.