I like to keep context small and focused. Spin up parallel agents without dragging in extra surface area.
It makes starting/parking work cheap so you can explore, review, and merge with less friction.
Check it out github.com/nrempel/wt
I like to keep context small and focused. Spin up parallel agents without dragging in extra surface area.
It makes starting/parking work cheap so you can explore, review, and merge with less friction.
Check it out github.com/nrempel/wt
wt archive bundles a branch + writes a diff; wt restore brings it back when you’re ready.
Hooks let you auto‑run team/agent setup after new, archive, or restore—great for kicking off Claude Code or Codex in that workspace.
wt archive bundles a branch + writes a diff; wt restore brings it back when you’re ready.
Hooks let you auto‑run team/agent setup after new, archive, or restore—great for kicking off Claude Code or Codex in that workspace.
What it does
wt new <name> spins up a clean worktree under .worktrees/<name> (from origin/main) and drops you into it.
wt switch jumps between worktrees without losing shell history.
What it does
wt new <name> spins up a clean worktree under .worktrees/<name> (from origin/main) and drops you into it.
wt switch jumps between worktrees without losing shell history.
You can use both Claude and Codex AND it leverages your monthly plan (or API keys if you want).
You can use both Claude and Codex AND it leverages your monthly plan (or API keys if you want).
But yes, I'm definitely not suggesting we codegen rustls or something as some others in this thread suggest. (I addressed that directly in the post)
But yes, I'm definitely not suggesting we codegen rustls or something as some others in this thread suggest. (I addressed that directly in the post)
blogs.microsoft.com/blog/2025/1...
blogs.microsoft.com/blog/2025/1...
Definition I am using for AGI:
Definition I am using for AGI: