►
From YouTube: Optimizing your development workflow with AI
Description
At GitHub, we're all about Open Source, but it's for startups, too. That's why we're premiering our newest stream, Start it Up Wednesdays at 2pm ET today! We're chatting with the CEO of Pieces, Tsavo Knott, to learn how he's using AI to optimize the development workflow.
A
A
A
Hello,
oh
my
God
I
did
not
know
what
the
music
was
gonna
stop
at
that
exact
moment.
I
should
have
been
paying
attention.
I
was
chatting
with
the
rest
of
the
chat,
hey
everyone.
If
you
are
not
familiar
with
this
stream,
it
makes
sense,
because
this
is
a
new
stream
that
github's
doing
called
start
it
up,
Wednesdays
the
name's
still
being
workshops.
A
So,
if
you
have
ideas
in
the
chat
of
what
the
title
can
be
feel
free
to
drop
it
below,
but
basically
this
is
a
twitch
stream
where
I'll
be
chatting
with
starter
Founders
about
their
product
and
how
we
can
better
use
it
if
discovering
how
they
built
it
and
then
also
how
they're
leveraging
GitHub
as
well
to
help
give
us
ideas
for
our
own
startups
as
well
or
our
own
projects
and
how
we
can
best
leverage
it.
A
One
thing
I
wanted
to
quickly
highlight
before
we
get
started
is
from
GitHub
for
startups,
and
let
me
just
share
my
screen
really
quickly
for
y'all
and
if
you
want
to
do
on
a
startup
right
now,
I
would
encourage
you
to
look
into
the
hope
for
startups.
Basically,
what
we
look
for
startups
does
is
helps
your
startup
go
from
idea
to
IPO
on
the
world's
largest
and
most
advanced
developer
platform.
Each
of
the
eligible
startups
receive
20
seats
of
GitHub
Enterprise
free
for
12
months.
A
So
definitely
look
into
that
tap
into
that
y'all,
because
that
is
a
really
great
benefit
like
GitHub
Enterprise,
for
free
for
12
months.
I
would
do
it,
but
without
further
Ado
I
want
to
go
ahead
and
introduce
our
guests
or
have
our
guests
introduce
themselves
hi
Salvo.
What's
up?
What's.
B
Going
on
everyone,
thank
you
Rizzle
for
for
having
me
and
we
are
GitHub
for
startups
partner
and
I
guess:
program
user.
We
build
on
GitHub
and
today
yeah
we're
going
to
be
talking
about
some,
some
pretty
exciting
things,
primarily
around
developer
productivity.
But
you
know
just
at
the
atomic
level
for
an
individual
developer
and
perhaps
their
team,
but
really
in
their
workflow.
B
So
I've
got
some
things
to
share
we're
going
to
have
a
nice
demo
and
also
you
know
at
the
end,
we'll
we'll
give
some
power
tips
of
how
our
startup
series
seed
startup
is
building.
You
know
efficiencies
on
top
of
the
the
GitHub
platform,
just
from
running
a
company
building
a
startup
Etc.
A
B
B
A
And
if
y'all
see
me
like
look
over
to
the
side
I'm
just
looking
at
my
list
of
questions,
so
let's
get
into
it
start
up.
What
does
it
do.
B
B
You
know
want
to
highlight
again
it's
the
simple
thing.
So
it's
back
to
the
basics
and
you
know
as
you're
a
developer
going
through
your
day-to-day
workflow
you're,
really
in
the
browser,
or
you
know
in
your
IDE
or
maybe
a
collaboration
environment
like
you
know,
Microsoft
teams
or
slack
or
Google
Chat,
and
so
in
all
three
of
these
places,
you're
interacting
with
developer
materials,
and
you
have
a
lot
of
context
where
that
interaction
occurred
in
your
workflow.
And
so
we
just
have
a
really
really
smart
place,
a
micro
repository.
B
If
you
will
for
you
to
put
those
things
it's
native
AI,
it's
got
a
bunch
of
magic
to
it
and
it's
really
really
frictionless
to
use
all
of
this
kind
of
just
amounts
at
the
end
of
the
day
to
improve
productivity
and
Time
Savings,
which
again,
as
developers,
are
asked
more
and
more
to
do
more
and
more.
These
days,
time
is
ever
more
valuable,
so
that's
really
the
the
name
of
the
game
for
us
and
we'll
have
a
whole
bunch
of
demo
stuff
here
in
a
sec
as
well.
A
For
a
little
bit
but
I
love,
it
I'm
really
excited
to
see
how
you
you
helped
to
save
time
because,
like
we
were
mentioning,
while
I
was
chatting
with
you
a
little
bit
beforehand,
I.
A
A
Could
inspired
you
to
create
this?
Were
you
initially
a
developer
before
or
you
had
a
different
background?
What
to
know.
B
Yeah,
so
you
know
myself
and,
and
the
team
we've
been
doing
startups
for
for
quite
some
time
now
and
so
I've
been
a
technical
founder
in
in
all
three,
but
the
second
startup
really
inspired
this
third
one
pieces
and
the
second
one
was
collaboration
environments
for
edtech,
so
think
slack
for
higher
education,
except
plug
into
the
school's
database
and
automatically
create
you
know
all
your
groups
and-
and
you
know,
channels
and
stuff
like
that
and
keep
them
up
to
date,
and
so
that
was
really
focused
on
how
people
collaborate,
which
is
you
know,
hey
I'm,
going
to
send
you
something
we're
going
to
have
conversation
Etc,
but
really
when
we
decided
to
make
a
pivot
from
the
edtech
space.
B
We
said
you
know,
let's
focus
on
you
know
other
markets.
We
wanted
to
focus
on
the
what
and
the
what
is
what
was
shared.
Perhaps
a
code
snippet
or
a
link,
or
you
know
just
a
an
important
resource,
and
that
applies
for
developers,
designers,
Etc
and
so
pieces
is
really
kind
of
that
concept
of
how
flipped
on
its
head
to
focus
on
the
what
is
shared
and
where
you
save
it,
and
then
we
add
a
bunch
of
magic
to
really
enrich
it
automatically
tag
it
title.
B
It
suggest
it
for
you
Etc,
so
that
you
can
take.
You
know
important
things
to
you
and,
and
you
know
out
of
that
chaos
of
you
know
a
collaborative
environment
and
save
it
off
for
kind
of
a
private
micro
environment
for
yourself,
so
we'll
we'll
we'll
do
a
demo
and
it'll
it'll
make
a
lot
more
sense.
Yeah.
B
A
Wow
this
sounds
interesting
but
like
how
could
this
all
happen?
Okay
if
you're,
if
you're
ready,
let's,
let's
transition
into
the
sure.
B
B
B
Won't,
oh
yeah
Perfect,
all
right,
okay,
fantastic,
so
yeah!
So
as
I
mentioned,
you
know,
there's
there's
a
whole
bunch
of
kind
of
locations
where
developers
is
doing
their
work
right,
and
so
let
me
just
kind
of
quickly
flash
the
the
home.
You
know,
location
which
is
pieces
right
and
I'll
get
bit
dive
into
this
a
bit
more.
But
let
me
just
talk
about
myself
and
my
personal
workflow
as
a
developer.
B
But
besides
something
like
chat
CBT,
you
know
oftentimes
I'm,
looking
for
packages
and
I'm
looking
for
sample
code,
maybe
I
want
to
save
something
Etc
and
then
of
course,
I'm
in
my
IDE
and
perhaps
I'm
in
a
very
large
code
repository
or
doing
a
PR
on
GitHub
and
I
say:
hey!
That's
a
nice
piece
of
code
I
actually
want
to
save
that
as
some
sample
code
or
I
want
to
save
it
and
send
it
to
someone,
maybe
a
teammate
that
I'm
onboarding
and
so
you're.
B
Just
interacting
with
all
these
kind
of
atomic
and
useful
material
serials,
and
then
you
know
that
moment
in
time
when
you
interacted
with
it
that
context,
that's
really
important
to
say
that
as
well,
so
I'll
kind
of
jump
in
and
show
you
what
that
looks
like.
So
you
know
today,
if
I,
if
I
have
you
know,
code
snippet
that
I,
like
maybe
I'll,
come
in
and
I'll
just
copy
this
for
a
lot
of
tools
that
are
out
there.
You
know,
for
example,
my
notes
app.
B
B
I,
just
control,
V
and
so
right
away.
Pieces
automatically
said:
hey
that
wasn't.
Actually
you
know
text
that
was
actually
code
and
it's
not
only
code.
B
It's
it's
Dart
and
then
what's
going
on
here
is
we're
doing
some
background
enrichment
to
actually
generate
smart
tags,
a
smart
title,
description,
Etc,
and
so
you
can
see
it
came
in
and
it
said
you
know
configuration
and
repository
for
providers
and
dart
right
and
so
I
can
go
ahead
and
just
flip
this
snippet
and
you
can
do
that
with
the
context
view
or
command
I,
and
you
can
see
we
automatically
added
a
bunch
of
tags
and
I
can
add
some
more.
B
You
know
if
I'd
like
so
of
course,
you
know,
however,
and
then
it'll
recommend
suggested
tags
too
so
Dart
and
so
on.
It
automatically
created
a
smart
description.
So
again,
that's
nice
to
have,
and
it
did
suggested
searches
for
me,
but
I
think
the
coolest
thing
for
me
is
the
fact
that
it
goes
out
and
we
automatically
associate
other
relevant
docs
and
documentation
that
might
be
related
to
you
know.
B
State,
Management
and
so
I
could
take
a
look
at
this,
and
this
is
State
Management
and
it's
highly
related
to
the
snippet
that
I
saved,
which
is
State
management
using
riverpod.
So
really
saving
that
snip
in
the
first
place
is,
is
really
important
and
if
I
go
to
you
know,
chat
gbt
I
can
do
the
same
thing.
B
Hey
I
want
to
maybe
save
this
to
pieces
using
the
the
Chrome
extension
and
here
I
am
I,
can
come
in
and
I
can
rename
it
if
I'd
like,
and
this
is
a
template
and
then
I
can
just
save
that
and
we'll
have
again
all
that
information
where
the,
where
the
the
snippet
came
from
other
related
links,
descriptions,
Etc
and
so
similarly,
we
have
amazing
vs
code
and
IntelliJ
plugins.
B
If
you'd
like
to
you,
know,
save
your
pieces
right
there
or,
if
you'd
like
to
search
or
look
at
the
pieces
that
you
have
so
you
can
see
here,
suggested
Snippets
or
all
Snippets,
and
if
I'm
in
line
I
can
go
ahead
and
search.
You
know
flutter
image
and
maybe
I
want
to
select
the
pieces
tab
or
try
this
out.
I
am
outstaging.
B
So
this
this
one
might
might
not
work,
but
you
got
the
idea
right,
yeah
yeah
you
could,
you
could
definitely
see
them,
and
you
can
also
view
the
snippet
as
well
like
I,
said
startups.
You're
shipping
fast,
so
you're
not
always
gonna
everything
you're
not
always
gonna
have
a
perfect
demo
but
yeah,
and
then
here's
the
snippet
in
my
ID
again
I
can
you
know
copy
it
run
it
in
place.
Look
at
the
the
content
Etc!
So
that's
all
about
saving
and
enrichment
and
really
all
I
did.
B
There
was
paste
I'll
pause
before
I
jump
into
the
other
two
components
which
is
transforming
and
also
looking
at
your
your
workflow
activity.
We
have
two
other
views
and
then
Global
search
which
is
really
exciting
as
well
so
yeah.
A
A
A
bit
I'll
put
it
into
like
my
notes,
app
or
somewhere
like
that,
doesn't
make
sense
or
I'll
have
it
in
Visual,
Studio
code
and
I'll,
be
like
oh,
my
God,
or
was
that
snippet
or
sometimes
I'll
be
nervous
to
like
close
a
tab,
because
I'm
like
this
stuff
over
football
post
or
whatever,
was
like
so
quality
I,
don't
want
to
lose
it.
That's.
B
Right,
yeah
and
so
yeah
definitely
use
snip
pieces,
Chrome
extension
and
save
that
snippet
we'll
have
the
the
origin
site
bunch
of
related
links
Etc
and
that's
the
context
that
I'm
talking
about
it's
like
saving
the
value
of
the
snippet,
but
also
like
where
it
came
from
who's
related
to
it,
Etc
so
yeah.
So
you
get
the
idea
of
saving.
We
want
to
make
it
super
fast
and
then
also
I
wanted
to
show
here.
We
actually
save
things
for
you.
B
So
when
I
do
work
in
IntelliJ
we're
actually
able
to
pick
up
on
those
patterns
and
say
hey,
this
snippet
is
useful
to
you,
based
on
what
you're
doing,
but
also
you
don't
have
anything
like
it
inside
of
pieces
already,
and
so
you
can
see.
I
have
a
bunch
of
auto
save
Snippets
here
and
if
I
wanted
to
take
a
look
at,
you
know
what
pieces
has
been
doing
in
the
background.
For
me,
I
can
go
to
my
workflow
activity
and
this
activity
is
kind
of
a
real
nice.
B
You
know
snapshot
of
everything
that's
going
on,
so
you
know
perhaps
I
want
to
look
at
creation
events,
and
you
can
see
yesterday
this
Dart
snippet
was
Auto
created
from
the
jetbrains
plugin
I
didn't
save
it
myself
and
it
turns
out
to
be
very
helpful
and
maybe,
if
it's
not
exactly
what
I
want
I
can
discover
related
Snippets
to
it,
which
will
take
a
sec,
we're
doing
some
some
generative
AI
here.
How.
B
Yeah
yeah
so
so
will
do
related
Snippets
via
AI
generation.
So
we
might
be
having
a
a
little
bit
of
a
cold
start,
but
here
we
are,
and
so
you
can
see
the
the
previous
snippet
was
about
executables,
and
so
you
can
see
you
know,
I
have
a
process
kill
here
and
some
others
adjust-in
time
process
termination
and
maybe
a
little
bit
of
shorter
code.
So
I
can
say:
hey
this
one's
nice
and
I
can
go
ahead
and
save
that
and
now
I
just
added
from
Discovery.
B
But
if
I
go
back,
what
you
were
mentioning
is
a
suggestion
based
on
what
I
last
say.
So
if
I,
if
I
jump
to
the
front,
this
is
not
generative,
but
this
is
actually
like
kind
of
a
tick
tock
like
you
know,
matching
algorithm
to
say:
hey
you
just
saved
it.
Now
we
can
Traverse
it,
but
over.
A
B
Yeah
but
I'll
take
that
as
a
compliment
yeah
and
and
of
course,
you
know,
a
lot
of
this
does
operate
like
in
our
plugins.
It's
it's
very
similar,
but
GitHub
co-pilot
and
copilot
X
do
productivity
at
the
kind
of
snippet
level
or
even
like
the
the
current
problem
level,
and
this
is
really
a
matter
of
hey
I'm,
solving
a
bunch
of
things
and
I
just
want
to
curate
that
final
solution
or
something
that's
important,
and
so
with
all
the
generative
AI.
B
But
speaking
of
saving
you're
going
to
save
a
lot
of
things
I
over
save
all
the
time,
and
so
the
the
next
two
things
that
I
want
to
do
is
obviously
reference
things,
but
also
share
things.
So
I'll
just
touch
on
sharing
again
we're
going
to
kind
of
hit
on
this
context.
B
You
know
the
importance
of
context
here
and
let
me
go
back
to
my
chronological
sort
but
yeah.
So
if
I
have
this
and
I
actually
want
to
share
this,
you
can
see
we
have
custom
domains
for
everyone.
Your
Snippets
are
up
on
your
private
kind
of
cloud,
which
is
cloud
gapped
from
other
users.
You
can
also
share
via
GitHub
GIS,
which
is
awesome,
but
if
I
copy
that
and
then
I
go
to
the
browser
we
can
see
here.
B
It's
actually
going
to
say:
hey
the
recipient
doesn't
need
pieces,
but
we're
going
to
give
them
the
snippet
and
all
the
contacts
that
they
want
again.
My
cloud
is
is
doing
a
little
bit
of
a
cold
start
here:
apologies,
but
we're
almost
there
yeah,
and
so,
if
I
sent
that
link
to
you,
you'd
actually
see
you
know,
there's
the
snippet.
I
can
save
it.
If
I
have
pieces,
but
again
you
can
see
all
the
metadata
related
links,
tags
and
now
I'm
associated
with
that.
B
So
if
I
sent
that
snippet
to
Mark
and
then
Mark
sent
that
snippet
to
Mac
Mac
would
know
hey,
I
could
talk
to
Mark
about
this
snippet
or
I
could
talk
to
Sabo
about
the
snippet,
and
so
even
the
people,
as
a
part
of
the
context,
is
really
important.
B
So
yeah,
that's
a
little
bit
on
sharing
and
I'll.
Just
show
you
again,
it's
personal
clouds.
You
can
see.
My
personal
cloud
is
already
booted,
so
the
next
time
around
it's
it's
very
fast.
So
we
do
have
you
know
again
serverless
infrastructure.
So
there
are
some.
Some
small
cold
starts
here
and
there,
but
the
last
last
thing,
which
is
really
really
awesome,
is
we
introduced
Transformations
and
also
really
really
Advanced,
Global
search,
so
I'll
just
show
you
Global
search
real
quick
again,
you
save
a
bunch
of
stuff.
B
B
Hey
I'd
like
to
just
maybe
look
at
one
of
these
suggestion,
suggested
searches
and
terminate
a
process
in
Dart,
and
you
can
see
that's
all
of
my
stuff
offline,
available,
queried
and
rendered
right
here
in
my
workflow,
and
so
these
are
my
tags,
my
Snippets,
my
related
links,
Etc
and
we
actually
kind
of
rank
each
one
based
on
how
important
it
is
to
your
current
workflow.
So
you
can
see
you
know:
here's
a
GPT
inference
server
that
we've
been
working
on.
That's
at
the
high
level
and
sometimes
too
you're.
B
Just
like
hey
I
need
to
clear.
You
know
git
history
and
I,
don't
remember
what
I
saved
or
how
I
titled
it.
But
right
here
we
are
remove
large
files.
This
is
a
really
important
snippet.
I
can
look
at
that.
I
can
copy
it
and
I
can
go
ahead
and
go
and
use
that
in
my
workflow,
so
really
really
nice
way
to
kind
of
globally
search
my
stuff,
it's
a
different
form
factor.
B
I
can
look
at
external
links
out
in
the
cloud
and,
if
I
don't
have
anything
that
I
that
I,
particularly
like
maybe
I,
could
come
in
and
I
can
say
you
know,
let's
do
the
remove
large
files.
I
can
jump
to
it,
and
this
is
the
thing
for
Transformations,
so
you
can
edit
the
snippet,
but
with
the
power
of
kind
of
large
language
models
in
the
cloud
you
can
actually
say
you
know,
I'd
like
to,
for
example,
create
a
draft
as
a
boilerplate
template
for
documentation
or
sample
code.
B
You
can
improve
the
snippet
for
performance,
you
can
improve
the
snippet
for
readability
or
you
can
kind
of
convert
the
snippet
to
a
different
language.
So,
if
I
wanted
to
convert
this
batch
file
to
Shell
go
ahead
and
find
it
here
right
here
and
then
I
wanted
to
say
also
git
push
all
after
clearing
the
cache.
B
I
can
actually
now
just
convert
that
and
I
can
give
it
a
little
note
on
how
I
might
want
to
transform
this
snippet
and
then
it's
going
to
go
ahead
and
do
this
and
by
the
way
this
is.
This
is
really
really
cutting
edge.
But
you
can
see
here,
yeah,
here's,
the
the
new
snippet
it's
commented
and
it
has
my
git
push
all
at
the
end
as
well.
As
you
know,
a
shell
compatible
version
and
I
can
say
this
to
Pieces.
B
So
I'll
go
ahead
and
close
there
and
right
there
at
the
front,
remove
large
file
from
git
history
and
it's
it's
duplicated
origin
site
everything
ready
to
go.
So
that's
some,
some
really
awesome
stuff.
That's
that's
coming
up
and
you
can
start
to
see
how
this
really
really
increases
productivity
in
your
workflow
and
it's
a
really
flexible
tool.
So
it's
it
kind
of
you
know
works
for
everyone
in
a
slightly
different
way.
A
Developer
productivity-
we're
not
always
thinking
about
like
oh,
the
developer,
has
to
be
like
you
said
in
the
browser
right
or
in
that
part
we
had.
We
had
a
couple
questions:
okay,.
B
A
Or
or
maybe
even
a
comment
someone
named
Paul
they
mentioned
it
doesn't
pieces
doesn't
appear
to
be
installable
through
Brew
on
the
Mac
it'll
be
awesome
if
it
could
be
made
available
that
way.
I
automate
all
my
setups,
so
it'd
be
great
to
be
able
to
do
that.
Absolutely.
B
A
A
B
B
Don't
know
yeah
so
so
we're
currently
a
free
application,
and
that's
because
we're
doing
a
what's
called
product-led
growth
for
a
startup
which
is
hey.
You
know
you
want
to
put
it
out
there.
You
want
to
grow
with
your
with
your
community
and
just
build
until
you
have
really
A
Plus
product
Market
fit.
B
So
if
you
go
to
pieces.app,
you
can
actually
get
it
just
again
on
your
Mac,
OS,
Linux
or
Windows,
and
just
you
know,
go
ahead
and
download
right
there.
We
will
have
some
paid
plans
that
are
coming
out
in
like
June
or
July,
which
really
are
actually
about
kind
of
privacy,
security,
offline
capabilities,
Etc,
which
I
have
a
really
amazing
demo.
That
I
want
to
slide
in,
and
it's
just
a
pre-recorded
video.
B
Let's
do
it
Okay.
So
again,
you
know
what
you
really
saw
is
those
large
language
models
in
the
cloud
they
take
a
minute
to
run
and
when
it
comes
to,
for
example,
titling
something
or
understanding
you
know,
tags
or
or
description.
B
That's
really
really
important
that
we
do
that
quickly
and
we
do
it
offline
and
if
you
build
software,
that's
used,
for
example
in
government
or
in
you
know,
a
very
secure
environment
code
is
a
very
important
material
that
you
know
you
can't
have
just
getting
leaked
so
I'll
just
go
ahead
and
pull
this
up
and
give
everyone
a
preview
here,
but
we
have
a
an
A
plus
kind
of
infrastructure
and
ml
team
in
our
company.
B
I
mean
our
whole
team's,
a
plus,
but
you
know
we're
really
pushing
the
the
boundary
on
some
of
the
machine
learning
here
and
this
video
actually
shows
pieces
running
completely
offline
and
on
device,
but
still
having
the
same
type
of
machine
learning
experiences.
So
you
can
see
I
want
to
you
know,
process
in
a
local
mode
and
I
pasted
and
right.
There,
we've
already
got
a
tie.
Title
we've
already
got
a
description
and
we've
already
got
four
tags.
I
might
have
to
play
that
back
because
it
was
so
fast,
but
yeah
you
can
see.
B
So
this
is
the
new
ml
again
micro
models
that
are
on
your
device
and
yeah
just
automatically
enriched
and
then
we'll
have.
The
comparison
which
is
I
can
go
to
a
blended
mode
which
uses
large
language
models
and
I
can
paste
that
snippet
and
we're
going
to
be
waiting
for
a
second.
B
It's
getting
there,
you
know
yeah
and
there
we
go
asset
searchable
list
generation,
and
so
you
know,
if
you
look
at
that
time,
difference
right
developers
are
jumping
around
their
workflow.
Just
super
quick
I
mean
you
saw
how
quickly
I've
been
I've
been
moving
around.
You
know
this
presentation
developers
move
fast
and
so
the
tools
you
use
have
to
move
at
that
same
speed
and
also
in
certain
environments.
They
have
to
be,
you
know,
secure
and
on
device.
B
So
we
put
a
large
emphasis
there
and
we're
probably
one
of
the
few
companies
in
the
world
that
are
taking
kind
of
GPT,
comparable
machine
learning
and
packaging
it
into
a
form
factor
that
can
run.
You
know
on
your
on
your
machine,
so
pretty
proud
of
of
the
team
and
what
we've
done
there
too.
A
B
I
do
have
one
last
Wild
Thing,
which
is
for
for
kind
of
the
origin
OG
way
where
people
are
maybe
learning
to
code
or
you're
watching
a
live
stream
like
this
I'll
show
you
we
do
have
a
really
nice
OCR.
So
if
you're
on
YouTube
and
you're
maybe
doing
a
like
a
a
flutter
or
something
like
that,
let's
try
YouTube
Okay.
So,
let's
see
what
we
got
and
again,
this
is
just
absolutely
I.
B
Don't
want
to
play
that
all
right,
I'll
just
take
a
screenshot
of
some
of
my
code
and
give
you
the
two
cents
here
but
you're
watching
a
YouTube
tutorial
on
how
to
build
something
and
you
you
want
to
take
a
screenshot
of
it.
So
you
don't
have
to
type
it
all
out.
We
use
machine
learning
behind
the
scenes
to
actually
say
Hey.
You
can
just
drop
that
image
onto
pieces.
Maybe.
B
B
For
it's
all
good,
it's
all
good!
Let's
try
it.
You
know
it's
not
perfect,
but
and
by
the
way,
our
products
about
a
year
and
a
half
old.
Now,
so
you
know
we're
we're
really
doing
a
lot
here.
We
go
so
I
just
dragged
and
dropped
that
image
on
there
and
you
can
see
we
automatically
said
hey.
B
That
was
a
PNG
image
and
it
has
Dart
in
it
and
if
you
flip
it
over,
you
know
we
we
added
some
light
tags,
but
I
can
actually
extract
that
code
out
of
the
image.
And
if
you
look
at
this,
it's
almost
100
accuracy,
and
this
is
really
hard
to
do
with
OCR
with
natural
language
you
can
actually
just
use.
You
know.
Natural
language
rule
sets
to
correct
the
OCR
code
or
the
sentences
with
code
characters
like
brackets
or
parentheses.
Semicolons
they're
really
hard
to
get
right
with.
B
You
know,
optical
character,
recognition,
and
so
we
basically
do
OCR
with
some
some
machine
learning
to
improve
or
repair
that
code
really
really
quickly.
Yeah.
B
Right
and
yeah
you
could
just
copy
it.
You
know
straight
to
your
clipboard
and
and
then
yeah.
You
can
just
go
back
to
your
your
project
and
paste
it
and
it's
it's.
It's
literally
identical
actually
like
and
I'm,
also
just
really
kind
of
mind
blown
by
our
own
work
here,
because
I've
seen
this
feature
improve
so
much
but
yeah
really
world
class.
There
very.
A
A
On
your
energy,
which
is
which
is
really
great
kudos
to
you,
they
said
salvos
energy
is
contagious.
I
need
him
as
an
everyday
early,
I'm,
sorry,
moral
booster
to
my
team.
This
is
awesome.
All
right,
yeah.
B
Definitely
nerd
out
over
this,
like
I,
said
I'm
a
developer
and-
and
you
know
it's
really
amazing-
to
to
build
tools
and
use
tools
and
just
and
just
they
so
deeply
empathize
with
your
workflow
right.
So
it's
just
it's
a
magical
thing
for
me,
too,.
B
Absolutely
but
you
better
bet
again:
growth
team
is
just
crushing,
so
we
have
a
beautiful
website.
We
have
some
some
really
beautiful,
Resource
Centers
as
well,
so
go
ahead
and
check
those
out,
but
on
the
resource
center
you
can
go
to
YouTube
channel,
and
here
we
are,
we've
got
a
bunch
of
playlists
power
tips,
you
name
it
for
vs
code
for
Chrome,
for
the
desktop
app
Etc,
just
really
professionally
made,
and
so
a
whole
bunch
of
power
tips
and
ways
to
use
features
in
pieces.
A
Great,
this
is
good.
This
is
good,
someone
asked:
will
there
be
snippet
generation.
B
Absolutely
all
right,
so
there
already
is
this:
this
ships
out
on
Monday,
okay,
I'm
still
sharing
so
I'm
Cheyenne,
like
I,
said:
there's
a
bunch
of
ways
to
create,
and
so
one
of
the
ways
you
can
create.
You
know
pasting,
you
know,
use
a
plug-in
import
from
gist,
but
what
we're
really
excited
about
is
yeah
just
describe
a
snippet,
so
maybe
I
just
these
are
suggested
again
based
on
what
I've
been
doing
and
things
I
have.
But
you
know
maybe
I
want
to.
A
B
Maybe
give
me
a
prompt,
maybe
we
have
something
from
the
you
know
from
the
audience
or
or
you
have
an
idea
audience.
A
B
B
Is
how
you'll
know
it's?
It's
real
yeah
there's.
B
Okay,
no
problem,
but
I'll
just
talk
about
this
yeah,
so
you're,
just
gonna
put
a
prompt
in
you
can
describe
whatever
you
want
and
then
you
can
select
a
language
just
to
be
a
little
bit
more
helpful,
but
yeah
and
then
it'll
it'll
generate
that
snippet,
which
is
which
is
pretty
exciting.
A
And
in
the
meantime
someone
said,
offline
support
is
great.
Oh
my
friend
Nick
said:
convert
an
object
from
JavaScript
to
Ruby.
Is
that
a.
B
Okay,
so
let's
do
let's
first,
create
that
JavaScript
snippet,
so
JavaScript
object
example
and
then
what
we're
gonna
do
here.
So
this
will
basically
generate
oh
I,
said
in
Dart
LOL,
but
yeah.
So
we
have
this
and
you
know
I
can
switch
it
to
actually
I'll
just
save
it.
That's
cool,
so
we're
saving
it
there
and
it
did
say
it
was.
B
It
was
JavaScript
like
I,
said
that
little
language
icon
is
a
Helper,
but
here
I
can
actually
either
duplicate
it
or
I
can
just
edit
it
again
and
I
can
say
I'd
like
to
switch
the
language
and
give
me
an
example
and
Ruby
using
rails
framework.
B
B
I
I,
don't
know
Ruby,
but
maybe
that's
maybe
that's
right,
looks
like
we've
got
some
arrows
in
there
and
and
so
on.
So
yeah
I'll,
just
I'll
save
that
yeah,
like
I,
said
that's
hot
off
the
press
by
the
way
and
there's
your
there's,
your
JavaScript
or
the
Ruby
object.
B
See
yeah,
we
do
all
right,
so,
let's
go
for
it.
I
don't
again,
like
the
team
makes
it
happen.
I'm
I'm
shocked
about
half
of
the
the
features
that
we
support,
but
all
right,
so,
let's
just
go
I'll,
go
ahead
and
add
and
I'll
say,
generate
Prime.
B
In
yeah,
or
actually
I,
don't
even
have
to
say
enclosure
I
can
just
you
know,
go
find
the
the
example
with
annotation
there
we
go
so
yeah
and-
and
you
can
do
this
all
day-
you
know
you
could
one
thing:
I'll
show
is
I
love,
so
yeah
I
guess
we
have
a
recursive
Loop
here
and
I
can
save
this,
and
then
you
know
for
me,
who's,
obviously
very
new
to
closure.
B
I
can
jump
up
to
the
front
and
I
can
say
Hey.
You
know,
that's,
that's
really
not
that
readable.
Let
me
go
ahead
and
just
improve
the
readability
here
and
we'll
get
this
in
a
sec.
B
Boom
there
we
go,
and
so
that's
fully
annotated
and
now
maybe
I
can
send
that
you
know
to
to
a
student
or
to
a
team
member
or
whatever,
but
yeah
prime
number
generator.
You
know,
we've
got
a
whole
bunch
of
tags
in
here
descriptions
related
links
if
I
want
to
learn
more
about
it,
Etc,
which
is
cool,
awesome.
A
B
Download
Monday
I
think
it
ships
Monday
for
everyone,
but
the
app
does
some
wild
stuff.
Today,
a
lot
of
the
transform
stuff
goes
Monday,
but
Global
search,
save
suggestion.
That's
all
live
today
and
I
think
create
with
description
too,
is
also
live.
A
B
B
Want,
okay,
yeah
I'll
just
do
a
super
quick
tldr,
actually
love
GPT,
myself,
I
use
it
quite
often
in
my
workflow
and
it's
nice
when
it's
not
wrong,
but
let
me
go
ahead
and
show
that
example
and
again
as
a
developer.
Classically
I
have
a
bunch
of
tabs
open
here.
So
oh
my
gosh,
oh,
maybe
maybe
I
closed
it
from
our
demo.
Okay,
let
me
go
chat,
GPT,
all
right,
so
yeah.
So
some
some
template
stuff
I
was
working
on
or
some
deployed
Cloud
run
again.
I
have
tons
of
conversations
here.
B
It
doesn't
even
load
them
all
and
I.
Just
have
you
know
tons
of
Snippets
in
these
you
know
just
back
and
forth
all
day,
long
errors
and
poisex,
etc,
etc,
but
when
I
finally
get
a
configuration
that
I'd
like
I,
actually
want
to
just
save
that
somewhere
and
so
pieces
is
kind
of
optimized.
For
that
that
curation,
you
know
where
it's
a
place
to
put
things.
B
You
know
out
of
a
collaboration
environment
out
of
a
research
flow
like
in
the
browser
or
out
of
you
know
your
IDE
from
a
large
code
repository
and
I'll
note
super
fast.
The
thing
about
pieces
is
that
we
do
a
bunch
of
enrichment,
basic
Notes,
app,
it's
just
plain
text.
It
doesn't
know
much
about
that,
but
if
I
take
that
same
code,
snippet
there
and
I
go
ahead
and
I
put
this
into
pieces,
just
paste
it
right
away.
B
We
said:
hey
that
wasn't
actually
text
that
was
actually
code
and
Not
only
was
it
code.
It
was
yaml
and
I
know
we
already
covered
this
a
little
bit,
but
it
went
a
step
further
and
it
said
I'm
not
going
to
go
ahead
and
name
that
for
you,
I'm
going
to
go
ahead
and
add
all
these
tags
for
you,
which
is
really
exciting,
a
custom
description
and
suggested
searches,
and
sometimes
we'll
be
able
to
associate
related
links,
which
I
can
just
do
a
quick
one
as
well,
and
this
is
really
nice
for
the
transform.
B
But
this
bash
script
here
I
can
paste
this
and
you
can
see
it's
again
doing
the
enrichment,
pretty
quick
there
checking
package
is
installed
here
are
those
related
links.
I
was
talking
about,
and
this
is
something
I've
been
doing,
a
lot
recently,
which
is
going
from
bash
and
then
I
actually
write
most
of
my
code
and
dart,
so
yeah
I
actually
convert
a
lot
of
bash
grips,
convert
to
Dart
with
comments
and
there
we
go-
and
this
is
again
I
do
this
where
GPT
made
it
might
have.
B
Given
me
a
bash
script
and
I
don't
want
to
re-ask
it
the
question
or
you
know
it's
from
a
conversation.
You
know
a
while
ago
and
I
just
put
it
in
pieces
and
like
hey
I,
have
this
I
like
to
say
that
and
there
we
go
so
yeah.
You
can
see
it's
globally
installed
and
dart,
which
is
awesome
so
yeah,
that's
a
little
bit
about
pieces.
We
have
a
bunch
of
sharing
for
the
people
who
joined
as
well,
really
nice
offline,
Global
search
again.
B
B
Well,
yeah
and
actually
relevant
to
this
question
here.
Everything
you
saw
today
is
going
to
be
free.
You
know
in
the
free
plan
for
for
quite
some
time,
if
not
forever.
Right,
especially
because
we
run
on
device
and
offline
a
lot
of
our
ml.
We
don't
have
to
incur
Cloud
costs,
so
we
can
actually
say
Hey.
B
You
know,
that's
that's
no
problem,
but
in
April
and
May
we
are
shipping
team-wide
feeds
where,
if
you
do
Global
search
it'll,
say
Hey,
you
know
here's
suggestions
from
Mark,
Snippets
or
or
if
you're
saving
a
similar,
snippet
and
Mark
has
also
saved
similar
Snippets
it'll
match
you
up
and
it'll
say
talk
to
Mark
about
this.
You
know
type
of
problem
or
this
type
of
snippet
Etc.
So
that's
the
team
stuff.
That's
coming
later
in
Q2,
awesome.
B
It's
it's
very
flexible
Tool,
but
we
are.
We
have
really
nice.
You
know
custom
sharing
today,
which
a
lot
of
people
use
and
but
yeah
we're
we're
really
kind
of
going
now,
all
right,
it's
a
plus
for
you
as
a
Dev.
Now,
how
has
it
become
a
plus
still
atomically
for
your
team
yeah.
A
B
A
We
did
a
lot
of
demos.
I
think
this
was
great
I
wanna
go
into
learning
how
you're
leveraging
GitHub
itself
absolutely.
B
Absolutely
so
you
know
basically
it's
funny.
We
we
started
out
in
kind
of
a
a
split
world
where
we
had
a
lot
of
kind
of
GitHub
and
we
had
a
lot
of
bitbucket
Etc.
We
also
had
like
Asana
for
project
management
and
so
on
and
so
forth.
Let
me
throw
these
slides
back
up
here.
Real
quick,
because
I
have
some
some
nice
screenshots.
Oh
I
was
sharing
already
so
again,
not
very
good
at
that,
but
there
we
go
all
right
so
yeah.
B
Thank
you.
Google
slides
for
for
freaking
out
on
me
appreciate
it
there
we
go
all
right,
yeah,
so
I,
it's
funny.
You
have
that
up
at
the
beginning,
I
went
to
your
guys's
website
and
I
edited
the
HTML,
and
you
know,
building
pieces
for
for
or
building
on
on,
GitHub
for
pieces,
so
yeah
threw
that
in
there
I
thought
you'd
like
that,
but
yeah,
again
collaboration,
devops
project
management,
compliance,
we're
getting
our
sock,
2
compliance.
B
So
that's
been
a
big
thing
for
us
and
Community
We've
really
built
a
lot
of
you
know:
kind
of
efficiencies
for
our
company.
On
top
of
you
know,
GitHub
and
so
I'll
quickly
mention
GitHub
actions.
We
have
some
pretty
Advanced,
you
know
architectures
that
run
both
on
device,
but
also
in
cloud-
and
this
is
you
know
all
the
way
down
to
you-
know,
database
structures
and-
and
you
know,
all
the
way
up
to
entire
applications
and
the
ml
in
between
and
so
there's
a
lot
of,
cross-platform
stuff.
B
So
you
know
Apple
silica,
Apple
Intel.
We
are
native
flutter
apps,
so
we're
compiled
to
Native
binaries
and
that's
pretty
interesting,
and
so
this
means
we
need
a
really
robust
and
perform
a
kind
of
you
know.
Ci
CD,
Pipeline
and
GitHub
actions
has
absolutely
crushed
it.
The
large
Runners
as
well.
You
know
speeding
things
up.
We've
got
some
pretty
large
and
complex
compilation
steps
for
for
our
products.
B
So
you
know
that's
really
really
great
and
then
speaking
on
that
too,
we
use
GitHub
actions
for
our
ml
Ops
to
automatically
train
micro
models,
deploy
those
micro
models,
measure
them
test
them
Etc.
So
a
lot
of
experimental
ml
Ops
baked
into
GitHub
actions
as
well.
B
That's
awesome,
yeah
I
will
say
our
developers
are
okay
at
project
management,
but
our
growth
team
is
absolutely
killer
at
project
management
and
they
do
this
through
GitHub
projects,
so
that
came
out
earlier
in
the
year
and
we're
an
early
adopter.
We've
Consolidated
a
bunch
of
tools,
and
you
know,
we've
got
it
right,
close
to
the
code
right
close
to
the
the
content,
and
you
know
it's
just
a
really
great
environment
and
then
layering
on
project
management.
B
It's
it's
really
been
great
for
us,
yeah,
GitHub
Wiki.
So
we've
built
a
beautiful
documentation
site.
This
is
actually
open
source.
If
you
want
to
go
check
that
out
and
we
actually
deployed
that
using
GitHub,
Pages
and
so
yeah,
you
can
go.
Take
a
look
at
that
as
well.
This
is
just
an
in-depth.
You
know
full
feature,
rundown
of
of
what
we're
building
with
like
kind
of
just
all
the
all
the
functionality
and
then,
of
course,
more
GitHub
Pages.
B
Our
website,
you
know,
proudly
served
on
on
GitHub,
which
is
great,
and
that's
that's
basically
that
I'll
also
know
I
didn't
have
a
screenshot
for
co-pilot,
but
some
of
us
use
copilot.
We
do
use
IntelliJ
some
use,
BS
code,
so
I,
don't
know
how
many
people
will
use
copilot
X
out
the
gate,
but
definitely
that's
that's
a
thing
for
us.
B
The
so
yeah,
so
our
documentation
is
open
source
just
again
so
people
can,
you
know,
collaborate
communicate
Etc,
but
I
will
note
and
we've
actually,
you
know
we've
actually
kind
of
been
back
and
forth
on.
This
is
when
you
sell
again
to
you,
know
the
government
or
you're
trying
to
you
know,
sell
to
Samsung
things
like
that.
B
Certain
compliance
levels
require.
You
know
your
app
to
either
be
closed,
Source
or
some
of
it
to
be
Etc.
However,
you
know
we're
built
on
open
source
and
so
we
kind
of
thread
the
needle
with
a
very
generous
like
free
version
of
the
app.
You
know
again,
and
you
know
kind
of
give
back
that
way
to
developers.
B
But
then
yeah
are
some
versions
of
our
app
are
going
to
be
very
locked
down.
For
those
types
of
you
know,
environments.
A
Yeah,
no,
that
makes
total
sales
I'm
always
interested
in,
like
learning
the
the
decision
behind
like
making
a
project,
closed,
Source
or
or
open
core
or
open
source.
So
like
that
one's
really
great,
we
do
have
an
interesting
question
here.
A
Peter
asks
is:
will
it
support
or
does
it
support,
generating
the
description
in
different
languages?
Besides
English.
B
We
do
not
have
anything
so
again,
like
it's
been
a
year
year
and
a
half
in
in
process.
Localization
is
going
to
happen
very
very
quickly
for
us,
though,
so
we've
been
coming
up
to
speed,
we're
going
to
localize
it
to
a
lot
of
countries
here
in
in
Q2
and
Q3,
but
there
are
probably
some
clever
things
that
we
can
do
to
have
the
generative
stuff
just
select
a
language
drop
down,
so
the
whole
app
doesn't
have
to
be
localized,
but
definitely
the
description.
So
maybe
we
could
do
something
quick,
yeah,
okay,.
A
That
sounds
good
and
I'm,
always
interested
in
that
myself,
because
I'm,
like
you
know
it
makes
it
be
able,
like
developers,
are
Global,
so
it
just
makes
it
more
accessible.
Somebody
asks:
will
this
work
in
pie?
Chat,
charm
should
I
start
using
IntelliJ
for
Django
apps.
B
You
can
use
you
know
whatever
you
like.
We
support
all
the
jetbrains
Ides
and
we
have
again
like
a
really
nice
documentation
on.
You
know
how
to
use
pieces
inside
of
IntelliJ
installation.
You
know
all
the
kind
of
feature
sets
Etc
and
so
yeah
go
check
it
out.
We
we
again
support
the
whole
IntelliJ
family.
You've
got
a
good
amount
of
users
on
there.
I
think
we're
coming
up
on
on
14
soon,
so
maybe
go
help
us
bump
that
up
that'd
be
great.
Yes,.
A
A
Yeah
all
right,
so
my
other
question
to
you
is
about
the
GitHub
for
startups
program,
so
you
are
in
it
correct
right
how
how
how
did
you
become
involved
in
it
and
how
has
it
been
beneficial
for
your
organization,
yeah.
B
I
think
just
like
a
little
bit
of
of
network
effect
again
like
as
a
Founder
I.
Think
Alex's
is
on
your
team
as
well
to
Alex's,
and
we
actually
know
both
Alex
Wood
and
Alex.
I
can't
remember
his.
A
Last
name:
it's
like
Alex
M,.
B
Oh
yeah
again,
you
know
I
read
too
much
code,
so
the
naming
part
is
is
hard
for
me,
but
yeah,
just
Network
effect
and
I.
Think
we
bumped
into
Alex
at
you
know
just
like
a
an
event
to
start
up
event
from
University
and
then
you
know
he's
like
hey.
You
guys
are
building
Dev
tools,
check
it
out.
Oh
there's
Garrett
yeah,
Gary
Garrett
reached
that
you
know
and
and
I
I
don't
know
it's
gonna
happen.
B
Naturally,
a
lot
in
the
startup
space
as
though
it's
pretty
serendipitous,
so
you
know
but
yeah,
and
then
we
just
you
know
we
kept
working.
We
kept
working
and-
and
you
know
we
really
our
early
adopters-
do
a
lot
of
stuff
and
I
think
we
also
give
her
a
two
cents
when
we
think
something's,
like
kind
of
offer
or
not
going
to
be
how
we
like
it.
So
you
know
so.
A
On
your
side
as
a
startup,
founder
kind
of
kind
of
Switching
gears
here,
it's
like
I
think
I
think
I
always
like
to
promote
like
becoming
an
open
source,
maintainer
starting
your
own
business
and
being
a
Founder,
but
I
also
like
to
talk
about
the
challenges
so
that
people
are
aware.
So
so
what
challenges
have
you
encountered
as
a
startup,
founder
yeah.
B
So
I
I'd
say
so
number
one.
You
know
the
the
technical
space
is
moving
very,
very
quick
and
the
the
bar
and
the
expectation
from
consumers
of
of
what
your
product
does
is
higher
and
higher
every
year.
So
you
know
there
is
a
barrier
to
entry,
but
building
I
I,
never
thought
would
be
the
hard
part.
B
Actually
what
what
is
more
interesting
is
building
a
high
performance
team,
building,
an
inclusive
and
collaborative
kind
of
environment
and
Company
culture,
and
really,
when
we
scaled
from
like
six
people
to
you,
know
almost
22
within
the
span
of
you
know
less
than
a
year
there
were.
You
know
that
was
a
wild
learning
and
it
was
like
how
do
we
organize?
How
do
we
orchestrate?
How
do
you
delegate
Etc,
and
so
you
know,
as
a
founder
and
as
a
technical,
founder
kind
of
duplicating
responsibility.
B
You
know
and
and
just
deferring
things
or
or
delegating
things-
that's
really
figure.
That's
really
hard
to
figure
out
and
become
good
at
and
also
too
is,
like
you
know,
in
tech,
there
are
a
lot
of
like
opinions
right,
as
you
know,
there's
like
the
Twitter
Wars
about
you
know
the
web
space,
it's
funny,
because
I
used
to
work
on
web
components
and
there
was
a
whole
like
reacted,
web
components,
community
and
they're,
just
like
at
it
we're
now,
happily
in
the
dart
and
flutter
space.
It's
it's.
B
You
know
it's
its
own,
happy
Community,
but
you
know
people
are
opinionated,
and
so
how
do
you
consolidate
technical
debt?
How
do
you
reduce
opinions?
How
do
you
not
make
people
feel
that
their
opinion
doesn't
matter
Etc?
These
are
all
challenges
of
building.
You
know
a
technical
team,
but
also
building
a
product
for
a
technical
audience
right,
and
so
you
know
developers
are
notoriously
hard
to
to
build
for,
but
yeah
those
are
some
of
the
challenges
just
again
empathize
you
know
and
and
just
yeah
just
try
and
understand.
You
know
it's.
A
You
realize
you
can't
please
everyone
and
I
think
that
was
an
interesting
thought
of
from
you
about
like
delegating,
because
I
know
sometimes
that,
like
technical
Founders,
they
they
have
a
a
struggle
of
like
not
being
in
the
code
base.
They
still
want
to
be
in
it
and
it's
like.
Sometimes
it's
like
you
gotta.
Let
the
raids
go
like
go
through
the
other,
like
CEO
CTO
stuff,
that
you
need
to
yeah
yeah
I.
A
Guess
people
are
pointing
out
that,
like
there's,
startup
companies
or
companies
with
good,
like
team
building
or
of
culture
code,
decks
so
I
believe
this
person
works
at
gift,
but
they
said
HubSpot
culture
code
deck
is
really
helpful
and
then
someone
also
mentioned
that
get
Labs
onboarding.stars
as.
B
Well,
to
check
that.
A
Out
yeah
I
never
and
I
haven't
well.
I
I
have
seen
Hub
spots,
but
I
haven't
seen
the
git
Labs.
What,
on
the
flip
side,
what
has
been
like
the
rewarding
part
of
leading
a
startup
for
you.
B
You
know
yeah
I
would
say
the
the
most
rewarding
part
number
one
is
is
I
would
just
say
seeing
everyone
and
everything
just
like
grow
so
much.
You
know
when
when
people
come
into
a
startup
and
and
you
put
a
bunch
of
high
performing
individuals
together,
it's
wild
what
starts
to
occur
and
one
of
the
reasons
we're
able
to
ship.
So
much
is
you
know
our
MLT
and
our
infrastructure
team,
our
front-end
team,
our
growth
team.
B
You
know
everyone
is
just
self-accountable
and
has
that
startup
mentality
right,
and
so
you
know
it's
just
it's
fantastic,
but
what's
even
more
special.
Is
that
you're
doing
something
on
your
own
and
maybe
you're
checking
in
late
night
on
something
or
you
know,
especially
as
a
Sprint
leader
or
an
exec,
you
gotta
just
again
keep
tabs
and
things,
and
just
things
are
done.
You
know
they're
done
above
and
beyond.
B
That's
probably
the
best
most
magical
feeling
you
can
have
and
then,
when
your
product
starts
to
do
things
that
surprise
you
that
are
really
nice.
That's
amazing
I'll
tell
you
that
that's
great!
It's
like
someone
on
a
team
somewhere
put
some
type
of
extra
effort
in
and
then
also
interacting
with
customers.
B
Again
developers
super
super
opinionated
Etc,
and
if
you
you,
you
know
you
get
that
experience
here.
It's
like
oh
wow.
This
is
really
nice.
That's
just
really.
You
know.
That's
the
name
of
the
game
for
us
yeah
that.
A
B
Know
one
last
thing
on
that
is
the
best
advice
I
can
give
to
anyone
out
there.
Starting
company
is
be
a
do
with
leader
right
and
so
what
I
mean
by
that
is
like
again
I
go
to
these
like
founder
events
and
stuff,
like
that
sometimes
and
I
look
around
and
I'm,
like
you
know,
anyone
who's
looking
rested
here
too
rested
they're,
probably
not
a
do
with
leader
right,
and
so
you
know,
if
your
team
is,
is
absolutely
getting
after
it.
B
You
want
to
be.
You
know
again
doing
with
not
saying
hey
do
this,
for
you
know,
XYZ
and
so
I
think
that
from
the
top
down
everyone
empathizes
with
the
work
that
you
know,
anyone
in
the
company
needs
to
do
and
nothing's
too
small
for
for
anyone
right.
B
A
Y'all
have
the
camera
just
randomly
turns
off
I'm,
just
gonna
turn
off
again:
okay,
I'm
gonna
switch
to
a
pretty
ugly
view
of
me.
Sorry
folks,
but,
like
my
Mac
camera
I'm,
probably
super
close
to
it,
and
it's
all.
B
A
A
I'll,
actually
we're
coming
closer
to
time.
So
maybe
I'll
ask
maybe
two
more
questions
about
this
part
of
life.
I'll
switch
to
the
fun
question,
for
you
sure
I
am
curious.
If
you
have
any
advice
on
how
you
prioritize
features.
B
B
That's
out
there,
and
so
what
that
distills
down
to
is
solve
like
and
explore
the
unknown
first
and
then
default
to
the
known
way,
and
so,
if
there's
an
experience
that
you're
trying
to
say,
hey,
look,
let's
push
the
the
ball
forward
on.
You
know:
Edge
ml
everyone
can
do
Cloud
ml
right.
That's
a
known
thing!
You
can
pull
it
in.
You
can
have
an
API
Etc,
but
solving
for
the
unknown
is.
Can
we
take
the
power
of
those
Cloud?
B
You
know
models
and
put
them
on
your
device
and
in
solving
that
you
know,
but
not
not
sticking
on
that
too
too
long
right,
if
you,
if
it's
not
working
cut
it,
but
by
solving
that
you're
going
to
learn
a
whole
bunch
of
things
that
you
can
say
hey
we
can
default
to
the
known,
but
at
least
we
can,
you
know,
add
XYZ
improvements
to
it
so
just
solve
for
the
unknown.
First,
you
know
don't
do
the
default
default.
Thinking
is
just
not
going
to
get
you
far.
A
Great
advice:
I'm
gonna,
not
ask
my
questions
because
there's
some
there's
a
question
in
here
and
I
like
to
interact
with
the
audience
more.
B
A
Me
they
said
I'm
about
this
I'm
about
how
it
started
hold
on
I.
Think
they're,
asking
sorry:
do
you
have
any
advice
for
how
startup
technical
directors,
your
technical
managers
or
developers
balance
inward
guidance
of
developers,
but
outward
communication
to
program
managers.
B
Again,
you
know
the
most
important
thing
and,
and
this
is
just
the
hardest
part,
but
it's
the
do
with
part
right,
and
so,
if
you're
gonna
show
up
to
a
conversation
with
your
Sprint
leads
or
your
ml
team,
and
you
you
hadn't
done
your
homework,
you
know
or
you're,
not
asking
first
principle
questions.
B
You
know,
that's
gonna,
stick
out
like
a
sore
thumb
and
they're
gonna
immediately
know
hey.
You
didn't
empathize
with
the
challenge
in
front
of
us
or
the
the
problem
that
we're
trying
to
solve.
So
if
you
come
in
as
a
technical
director
or
anything
like
that,
you
know,
excuse
me,
it's
gonna
be
recognized,
like
you
know
very
quickly,
and
so
you
know
do
your
homework
admit
what
you
don't
know
explore.
You
know
and
fill
in
the
gaps
and
and
show
up
and
just
have
a
high
level
of
empathy.
B
You
know
I,
don't
I'm,
not
an
ml
expert
I'm,
not
you
know,
I'm
kind
of
an
in-between
technical,
you
know
individual
and
so
when
I
show
up
on
front
end
or
infrastructure
or
ml,
it's
like
hey,
look,
I,
don't
know
what
I
don't
know,
but
here
are
the
first
principal
thoughts.
You
know.
Let's
look
at
our
options,
so
yeah
it's
kind
of
a
fuzzy
way
of
thinking
about
it.
I.
A
A
Unless
you
have
such
a
great
fantastic.
B
Yeah
we
are,
we
absolutely
are
yeah.
We
have
like
I
said
My.
Demo
today
was
on
staging,
which
is
pretty
funny.
So
yeah
we
have
staging
releases
beta
releases
production
releases,
all
through
GitHub
actions.
You
know
standard
git
commits
you
know
all
that
type
stuff.
Branch
permissions,
you
name
it.
A
You're
a
little
bit
about
your
journey,
what
the
the
actual
product
does
I'm
gonna
switch
into
some
some
fun
questions,
less
technical
just
just
to
to
round
this
out,
and
then
this
out
here
first
question
is:
what's
your
most
used,
emoji.
B
Oh,
probably
the
handshake
Emoji
yeah
that
one's
that
one's
pretty
funny.
You
know
we're
gonna
be
coming
up
on
our
series
a
you
know
later
in
the
year
and
and
or
you
know
early
next
year
or
something
and
so
there's
a
lot
of
like
just
networking,
and
you
know,
setting
up
meetings
and
stuff
like
that,
so
I've
been
on
a
handshake.
Emoji
kick
green
check
marks.
You
know
for
our
email
today,
I
was
like
done
done.
You
know
that
one's
key
so
probably
does
too
nothing.
A
Better
than
checking
off
something
from
a
to-do
list:
okay,
what's
your
favorite
app
on
your
phone.
B
This
might
make
me
sound
like
a
psychopath,
but
I
the
the
Century
crash
analytics
app
for
for
I.
Don't
even
think
it's
supported
I,
don't
know
why
it's
just
a
daily
habit.
They,
but
the
first
thing
I
do
is
when
I
look
up
is
just
like
how
many
failed
you
know
rods.
Do
we
have
how
many
sessions
Etc,
you
know
and
and
yeah
I
mean
that's
just
the
I
guess
it's
kind
of
a
small
way
of
just
looking
at
the
deal
for
the
day.
Yeah.
A
B
Yeah
I,
so
I
I've
been
a
startup
founder
like
since
straight
out
of
out
of
college,
but
you
know
yeah.
So
this
is
third
company.
Fifth
major
major
project
and
some
of
the
previous
projects
you
know
were
rolled
into
open
source
or
things
like
that.
But
I
would
say
a
flavor
of
that
question
is
the
edtech
space
I
just
don't
know
if
I
can
build
an
edtech
space
just
again:
sales
cycle
compliance
regulation,
barrier
to
entry,
Etc
yeah,
I'm,
I'm
liking.
The
plg
motion
a
lot
better
for
sure.
B
Oh
man,
this
is
a
hard
one.
I
yeah
I
have
a
bunch
of
a
bunch
of
songs.
B
Yeah
I
I,
like
the
song,
called
it's
it's
very
PG
for
the
for
the
audience,
but
it's
called
say
yeah
by
troyboi.
So
yeah
you
check
it
out.
It's
a
it's,
a
good
vibe.
You
know
bump
it
in
the
car
or
something
and
yeah
it's
a
good
one.
But
nice
little
energy
song.
A
I
love,
I'll,
I'll
check
it
out,
I
love,
listening
to
other
people's
rules,
right
yeah,
I,
just
I
just
haven't
just
in
my
my
other
twitch
stream.
I,
usually
ask
like:
what's
your
favorite
to
be
on
so
I'm
like
trying
out
new
ones,
all
right,
y'all?
Well,
is
there
any
within
this
last
minute
or
I?
Guess
the
last
second,
what
anything
you
want
to
promote
and
tell
people
to
check
out
I
guess
we
already
have
like
the
piecesapp.com
and
then
youtube.com
I
get
pieces,
but
anything
that
I.
B
Miss
yeah
our
Twitter
same
thing:
Twitter
at
get
pieces
really
really
awesome
a
lot.
A
lot
of
interactions
there
and
and
we're
gonna
be
putting
together
some
more
communities
on
on
Reddit
and
probably
like
a
Discord
and
stuff
again
later
in
Q2,
but
all
the
support
you
know
really
appreciate
it
and
again
you
know
we're
a
startup
we're
doing
the
startup
thing
so
yeah.
A
Awesome.
Thank
you
all,
thanks
to
the
audience
for
being
really
engaged,
I
always
appreciate
that.
So
that
way,
it's
not
like
we're
talking
to
ourselves.
Thank
you
so
much
Sabo
for
for
joining
us
today
and
I'm,
taking
the
time
to
explain
on
what
your
product.
B
A
Now
audience,
definitely
if
you,
if
you
really
like
this
stream,
go
ahead
and
download
pieces,
try
it
out
at
pieces.com
and
that,
but
with
that
I'll
I'll
end
this
up.
Thank
you.
Y'all
bye,.