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My collection of art, philosophy and poetry apps. They have previously just been on iOS but I just finished the Kotlin port of the art one, so will be releasing that soon.

The poetry one is react native. Art and philosophy ones are swift/kotlin. I wanted to see if you could use LLMs to effectively create a cross-platform app. The idea behind react native was that you write it once in an approachable language, then the framework compiles to native app code. In 2025, the approachable language you code in is English, and the LLM now generates native app code.

It was generally a success and I feel less of a need of the development overhead of react native these days.

https://apps.apple.com/gb/app/for-arts-sake/id6744744230

https://apps.apple.com/gb/app/daily-philosophy/id6472272901

https://apps.apple.com/gb/app/the-poetry-corner/id1602552624


I very recently created an app that helps people learn art history.

https://apps.apple.com/gb/app/for-arts-sake/id6744744230

It’s a first version, and there’s a lot more content and features to come, but it’s actually already taught me so much making it!


Humble plug for my poetry app. When I was getting into poetry I was reading a lot of them online but found the majority of sites to have awful designs with garish ads that completely detracted from the poem. So I wrote a scraper which downloaded 40,000 poems that were in the public domain and rendered them in an iOS app with a beautiful design. Crafting individual profiles for all of the poets was painstaking and arduous, but the users seem to really enjoy the app so far. I do already have some AI analysis for arcane poems (but I don’t explicitly mention that it’s AI as I think apps should never say that - it doesn’t interest users, only investors).

https://apps.apple.com/gb/app/the-poetry-corner/id1602552624


> I do already have some AI analysis for arcane poems (but I don’t explicitly mention that it’s AI as I think apps should never say that - it doesn’t interest users, only investors).

I think it's dishonest not to mark AI-generated content, especially for commentary on something as personal and heartfelt as poetry. As a potential user, this definitely makes me less interested in what otherwise looks like a very nice app.


You could make a similar argument for self-driving cars. We would have got there quicker if the roads were built from the ground up for automation. You can try to get the world on board to change how they do roads. Or make the computers adapt to any kind of road.


Humble plug for the poetry app I created for iOS. The Poetry Corner is written in React Native, and contains over 40,000 public-domain poems, and surfaces the classics in a beautiful and distraction free design!

https://apps.apple.com/gb/app/the-poetry-corner/id1602552624


This is just what I needed as I stare out the snowy window scene.

A request: would be nice if it did not constrain to the dimensions of a phone when on an iPad.

Thanks!


To be fair in the human-based teams I've worked with in startups I couldn't show you products with decent retention.


When multiple senior people resign in protest, it's indicative that they're not happy with someone among their own ranks who they vehemently disagree with. John Schulman and Greg left in the same week. Greg, opting to choose to take a sabbatical, may have chosen that over full-on resigning which would align with how he acted during the board-ousting - standing by Sam till the end.

If multiple key people were drastically unhappy with her, it would have shaken confidence in herself and everyone working with her. What else to do but let her go?


I think this hits the nail on the head. Obviously a lot of the participants in this discussion are programmers, so there is going to be a fair amount of bias where people feel like their self-worth is being attacked/devalued. That being said, from a company perspective, this should much more unlock "moving faster" than "let's rest on our laurels". Any company that has a leading position in a particular industry is currently at greater risk of upstarts achieving their feature set in a reduced amount of time. The incentive for all companies will be to find programmers who are skilled in directing and debugging AIs.

I am currently building an iOS app using GPT-4 (I don't know Swift), and am developing an awareness of what it can/can't do, and surprised that I'm moving at the speed I did when creating React Native apps. In a possibly more competitive future market for developers, it does work in one's favour if some developers resist the efficiency improvements of AI.


This does sound like a test that is almost "set up to fail" for an LLM. If the answer is something that most people think they know, but actually don't then it won't pass in an LLM which is essentially a distillation of the common view.


One could also feel a moonquake while looking at an earthrise.


How would one view an earthrise?


By going to the moon.


Did you miss a step? The moon doesn't have earthrises.


They're probably referring to this photo [0]. This effect was actually due to the fact they were on the spacecraft in motion, but it's apparently possible to have an earthrise near the edges of the Earth-visible portion of the moon, because the Moon isn't completely stationary relative to earth:

> Because the Moon is tidally locked with the Earth, one side of the Moon always faces toward Earth. Interpretation of this fact would lead one to believe that the Earth's position is fixed on the lunar sky and no earthrises can occur; however, the Moon librates slightly, which causes the Earth to draw a Lissajous figure on the sky. This figure fits inside a rectangle 15°48' wide and 13°20' high (in angular dimensions), while the angular diameter of the Earth as seen from Moon is only about 2°. This means that earthrises are visible near the edge of the Earth-observable surface of the Moon (about 20% of the surface). Since a full libration cycle takes about 27 days, earthrises are very slow, and it takes about 48 hours for Earth to clear its diameter.

[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earthrise



That's only from orbit. The Moon is tidally locked to Earth, so Earth remains in roughly the same spot in the sky.


It has a wobble. Near the limb or poles you would see an earthrise. This is shown in the beginning of the second season of For All Mankind btw.


Kim Stanly Robinson also hits on this in Red Moon. Someone is emotionally invested in having a particular plot of moon where the earth peeks out through a gap in a crater wall during the wobble.


There is some wiggle in the tidal lock so you could get an earthrise near the edge of the dark side.


Far side, you mean.


It does, but they are not the same as moonrises from earth.


Sure, in the sense that the Earth can never leave a small fixed area of the sky, that area of the sky generally doesn't include the horizon, and the Earth cannot be seen to move at all except over very long periods of time.

In other words, not only are they not the same, they are not similar in any way, nor is "rise" an applicable term.


of course does, it is just mostly stationary. so to view it in motion you have to move yourself from the far side to the nearside


omg, I'm an idiot sometimes. It's a wonder they let me anywhere near spacecraft.


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