| Mythical Man Month |
https://martinfowler.com/bliki/MythicalManMonth.html |
Martin Fowler highlights this key idea from The Mythical Man-Month (Fred Brooks, 1975, still impressively relevant 50 years later):
> I will contend that conceptual integrity is the most important consideration in system design. It is better to have a system omit certain anomalous features and improvements, but to reflect one set of design ideas, than to have one that contains many good but independent and uncoordinated ideas.
**Conceptual integrity** is exactly the missing piece I've been trying to nail down in understanding why being able to spit out new features so quickly offers new challenges when working with coding agents. |
2026-05-10 15:36:19+00:00 |
| Mythical Man Month |
https://martinfowler.com/bliki/MythicalManMonth.html |
Martin Fowler highlights this key idea from The Mythical Man-Month (Fred Brooks, 1975, still impressively relevant 50 years later):
> I will contend that conceptual integrity is the most important consideration in system design. It is better to have a system omit certain anomalous features and improvements, but to reflect one set of design ideas, than to have one that contains many good but independent and uncoordinated ideas.
**Conceptual integrity** is exactly the missing piece I've been trying to nail down in understanding why being able to spit out new features so quickly offers new challenges when working with coding agents. |
2026-05-10 15:31:32+00:00 |
| Using Claude Code: The Unreasonable Effectiveness of HTML |
https://twitter.com/trq212/status/2052809885763747935 |
Thought-provoking piece by Thariq Shihipar (on the Claude Code team at Anthropic) advocating for HTML over Markdown as an output format to request from Claude.
The article is crammed with interesting examples (collected on [this site](https://thariqs.github.io/html-effectiveness/)) and prompt suggestions like this one:
> `Help me review this PR by creating an HTML artifact that describes it. I'm not very familiar with the streaming/backpressure logic so focus on that. Render the actual diff with inline margin annotations, color-code findings by severity and whatever else might be needed to convey the concept well.`
I've been defaulting to asking for most things in Markdown since the GPT-4 days, when the 8,192 token limit meant that Markdown's token-efficiency over HTML was extremely worthwhile.
Thariq's piece here has caused me to reconsider that, especially for output. Asking Claude for an explanation in HTML means it can drop in SVG diagrams, interactive widgets, in-page navigation and all sorts of other neat ways of making the information more pleasant to navigate.
I wrote about [Useful patterns for building HTML tools](https://simonwillison.net/2025/Dec/10/html-tools/) last December, but that was focused very much on interactive utilities like the ones on my [tools.simonwillison.net](https://tools.simonwillison.net/) site. I'm excited to start experimenting more with rich HTML explanations in response to ad-hoc prompts.
<h4 id="trying-this-out">Trying this out on copy.fail</h4>
[copy.fail](https://copy.fail/) describes a recently discovered Linux security exploit, including a proof of concept distributed as obfuscated Python.
I tried having GPT-5.5 create an HTML explanation of the exploit like this:
> `curl https://copy.fail/exp | llm -m gpt-5.5 -s 'Explain this code in detail. Reformat it, expand out any confusing bits and go deep into what it does and how it works. Output HTML, neatly styled and using capabilities of HTML and CSS and JavaScript to make the explanation rich and interactive and as clear as possible'`
Here's [the resulting HTML page](https://gisthost.github.io/?ae53e3461ffdbfd0826156aacf025c7e). It's pretty good, though I should have emphasized explaining the exploit over the Python harness around it.
 |
2026-05-08 21:00:11+00:00 |
| Behind the Scenes Hardening Firefox with Claude Mythos Preview |
https://hacks.mozilla.org/2026/05/behind-the-scenes-hardening-firefox/ |
Fascinating, in-depth details on how Mozilla used their access to the Claude Mythos preview to locate and then fix hundreds of vulnerabilities in Firefox:
> **Suddenly, the bugs are very good**
>
> Just a few months ago, AI-generated security bug reports to open source projects were mostly known for being unwanted slop. Dealing with reports that look plausibly correct but are wrong imposes an asymmetric cost on project maintainers: it’s cheap and easy to prompt an LLM to find a “problem” in code, but slow and expensive to respond to it.
>
> It is difficult to overstate how much this dynamic changed for us over a few short months. This was due to a combination of two main factors. First, the models got a lot more capable. Second, we dramatically improved our techniques for *harnessing* these models — steering them, scaling them, and stacking them to generate large amounts of signal and filter out the noise.
They include some detailed bug descriptions too, including a 20-year old XSLT bug and a 15-year-old bug in the `<legend>` element.
A lot of the attempts made by the harness were blocked by Firefox's existing defense-in-depth measures, which is reassuring.
Mozilla were fixing around 20-30 security bugs in Firefox per month through 2025. That jumped to 423 in April.
 |
2026-05-07 17:56:25+00:00 |
| Our AI started a cafe in Stockholm |
https://andonlabs.com/blog/ai-cafe-stockholm |
Andon Labs previously [started an AI-run retail store](https://andonlabs.com/blog/andon-market-launch) in San Francisco. Now they're running a similar experiment in Stockholm, Sweden, only this time it's a cafe.
These experiments are interesting, and often throw out amusing anecdotes:
> During the first week of inventory, Mona ordered 120 eggs even though the café has no stove. When the staff told her they couldn’t cook them, she suggested using the high-speed oven, until they pointed out the eggs would likely explode. She also tried to solve the problem of fresh tomatoes being spoiled too fast by ordering 22.5 kg of canned tomatoes for the fresh sandwiches. The baristas eventually started a “Hall of Shame”, a shelf visible to customers with all the weird things Mona ordered, including 6,000 napkins, 3,000 nitrile gloves, 9L coconut milk, and industrial-sized trash bags.
Where they lose their shine is when these AI managers start wasting the time of human beings who have *not* opted into the experiment:
> She also successfully applied for an outdoor seating permit through the Police e-service, which didn’t require BankID. Her first submission included a sketch she had generated herself, despite having never seen the street outside the café. Unsurprisingly, the Police sent it back for revision. [...]
>
> When she makes a mistake, she often sends multiple emails to suppliers with the subject “EMERGENCY” to cancel or change the order.
I don't think it's ethical to run experiments like this that affect real-world systems and steal time from people.
I'm reminded of the incident last year where the AI Village experiment [infuriated Rob Pike](https://simonwillison.net/2025/Dec/26/slop-acts-of-kindness/) by sending him unsolicited gratitude emails as an "act of kindness". That was just an unwanted email - asking suppliers to correct mistakes that were made without a human-in-the-loop or wasting police time with slop diagrams feels a whole lot worse to me.
I think experiments like this need to keep their own human operators in-the-loop for outbound actions that affect other people. |
2026-05-05 22:14:21+00:00 |
| Granite 4.1 3B SVG Pelican Gallery |
https://simonw.github.io/granite-4.1-3b-gguf-pelicans/ |
IBM released their [Granite 4.1 family](https://research.ibm.com/blog/granite-4-1-ai-foundation-models) of LLMs a few days ago. They're Apache 2.0 licensed and come in 3B, 8B and 30B sizes.
[Granite 4.1 LLMs: How They’re Built](https://huggingface.co/blog/ibm-granite/granite-4-1) by Granite team member Yousaf Shah describes the training process in detail.
Unsloth released the [unsloth/granite-4.1-3b-GGUF](https://huggingface.co/unsloth/granite-4.1-3b-GGUF) collection of GGUF encoded quantized variants of the 3B model - 21 different model files ranging in size from 1.2GB to 6.34GB.
All 21 of those Unsloth files add up to 51.3GB, which inspired me to finally try an experiment I've been wanting to run for ages: prompting "Generate an SVG of a pelican riding a bicycle" against different sized quantized variants of the same model to see what the results would look like.
Honestly, [the results](https://simonw.github.io/granite-4.1-3b-gguf-pelicans/) are less interesting than I expected. There's no distinguishable pattern relating quality to size - they're all pretty terrible!

I'll likely try this again in the future with a model that's better at drawing pelicans. |
2026-05-04 23:49:24+00:00 |
| /elsewhere/sightings/ |
https://simonwillison.net/elsewhere/sighting/ |
I have a new camera (a Canon R6 Mark II) so I'm taking a lot more photos of birds. I share my best wildlife photos on [iNaturalist](https://www.inaturalist.org/), and based on yesterday's [successful prototype](https://simonwillison.net/2026/May/1/inat-sightings/) I decided to add those to my blog.
<img class="blogmark-image" src="https://static.simonwillison.net/static/2026/beats-sightings.jpeg" alt="Screenshot of a "Sightings" webpage with a search bar and RSS icon, showing "Filters: Sorted by date" and "208 results page 1 / 7 next » last »»". First entry: SIGHTING 7:51 PM — Acorn Woodpecker, with two photos labeled "Acorn Woodpecker" of black and white woodpeckers with red caps on tree branches, dated 2nd May 2026. Second entry: SIGHTING 10:08 AM – 11:17 AM — Acorn Woodpecker, Western Fence Lizard, Osprey, with three photos labeled "Acorn Woodpecker" (bird on bare branches against blue sky), "Wester..." (lizard on tree bark), and "Osprey" (nest on a utility pole), dated 1st May 2026. Third entry: SIGHTING 11:11 AM — White-crowned Sparrow, with a photo labeled "White-crowned Sparrow" of a sparrow with black and white striped head singing with open beak, dated 30th Apr 2026.">
I built this feature on my phone using Claude Code for web, as an extension of my [beats system](https://simonwillison.net/2026/Feb/20/beats/) for syndicating external content. Here's [the PR](https://github.com/simonw/simonwillisonblog/pull/668) and prompt.
As with my other forms of incoming syndicated content sightings show up on the homepage, the date archive pages, and in site search results.
I back-populated over a decade of iNaturalist sightings, which means you that if you [search for lemur](https://simonwillison.net/search/?q=lemur) you'll see my lemur photos from Madagascar in 2019! |
2026-05-02 17:26:40+00:00 |
| Codex CLI 0.128.0 adds /goal |
https://github.com/openai/codex/releases/tag/rust-v0.128.0 |
The latest version of OpenAI's Codex CLI coding agent adds their own version of the [Ralph loop](https://ghuntley.com/ralph/): you can now set a `/goal` and Codex will keep on looping until it evaluates that the goal has been completed... or the configured token budget has been exhausted.
It looks like the feature is mainly implemented though the [goals/continuation.md](https://github.com/openai/codex/blob/6014b6679ffbd92eeddffa3ad7b4402be6a7fefe/codex-rs/core/templates/goals/continuation.md) and [goals/budget_limit.md](https://github.com/openai/codex/blob/6014b6679ffbd92eeddffa3ad7b4402be6a7fefe/codex-rs/core/templates/goals/budget_limit.md) prompts, which are automatically injected at the end of a turn. |
2026-04-30 23:23:17+00:00 |
| Our evaluation of OpenAI's GPT-5.5 cyber capabilities |
https://www.aisi.gov.uk/blog/our-evaluation-of-openais-gpt-5-5-cyber-capabilities |
The UK's AI Security Institute [previously evaluated Claude Mythos](https://www.aisi.gov.uk/blog/our-evaluation-of-claude-mythos-previews-cyber-capabilities): now they've evaluated GPT-5.5 for finding security vulnerability and found it to be comparable to Mythos, but unlike Mythos it's generally available right now. |
2026-04-30 23:03:24+00:00 |
| We need RSS for sharing abundant vibe-coded apps |
https://interconnected.org/home/2026/04/29/syndicating-vibes |
Matt Webb:
> I would love an RSS web feed for all those various tools and apps pages, each item with an “Install” button. (But install to where?)
>
> The lesson here is that when vibe-coding accelerates app development, apps become more personal, more situated, and more frequent. Shipping a tool or a micro-app is less like launching a website and more like posting on a blog.
This inspired me to [have Claude](https://github.com/simonw/simonwillisonblog/pull/665) add an Atom feed (and icon) to my [/elsewhere/tools/](https://simonwillison.net/elsewhere/tool/) page, which itself is populated by content from my [tools.simonwillison.net](https://tools.simonwillison.net/) site. |
2026-04-30 18:38:48+00:00 |