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EPISODE · Jan 21, 2026 · 5 MIN

Get Good at Agents

from Interconnects · host Nathan Lambert

Two weeks ago, I wrote a review of how Claude Code is taking the AI world by storm, saying that “software engineering is going to look very different by the end of 2026." That article captured the power of Claude as a tool and a product, and I still stand by it, but it undersold the changes that are coming in how we use these products in careers that interface with software. The more personal angle was how “I’d rather do my work if it fits the Claude form factor, and soon I’ll modify my approaches so that Claude will be able to help.” Since writing that, I’m stuck with a growing sense that taking my approach to work from the last few years and applying it to working with agents is fundamentally wrong. Today’s habits in the era of agents would limit the uplift I get by micromanaging them too much, tiring myself out, and setting the agents on too small of tasks. What would be better is more open ended, more ambitious, more asynchronous. I don’t yet know what to prescribe myself, but I know the direction to go, and I know that searching is my job. It seems like the direction will involve working less, spending more time cultivating peace, so the brain can do its best directing — let the agents do most of the hard work.Since trying Claude Code with Opus 4.5, my work life has shifted closer to trying to adapt to a new way of working with agents. This new style of work feels like a larger shift than the era of learning to work with chat-based AI assistants. ChatGPT let me instantly get relevant information or a potential solution to the problems I was already working on. Claude Code has me considering what should I work on now that I know I can have AI independently solve or implement many sub-components. Every engineer needs to learn how to design systems. Every researcher needs to learn how to run a lab. Agents push the humans up the org chart.I feel like I have an advantage by being early to this wave, but no longer feel like just working hard will be an lasting edge. When I can have multiple agents working productively in parallel on my projects, my role is shifting more to pointing the army rather than using the power-tool. Pointing the agents more effectively is far more useful than me spending a few more hours grinding on a problem. My default workflow now is GPT 5 Pro for planning, Claude Code with Opus 4.5 for implementation. I often have Claude Code pass information back to GPT 5 Pro for a deep search when stuck with a very detailed prompt. Codex with GPT 5.2 on xhigh thinking effort alone feels very capable, more meticulous than Claude even, but I haven’t yet figured out how to get the best out of it. GPT Pro feels itself to be a strong agent trapped in the wrong UX — it needs to be able to think longer and have a place to work on research tasks.It seems like all of my friends (including the nominally “non-technical” ones) have accepted that Claude can rapidly build incredible, bespoke software for you. Claude updated one of my old research projects to uv so it’s easier to maintain, made a verification bot for my Discord, crafted numerous figures for my RLHF book, feels close to landing a substantial feature in our RL research codebase, and did countless other tasks that would’ve taken me days. It’s the thing de jour — tell your friends and family what trinket you built with Claude. It undersells what’s coming.I’ve taken to leaving Claude Code instances running on my DGX Spark trying to implement new features in our RL codebase when I’m at dinner or work. They make mistakes, they catch most of their own mistakes, and they’re fairly slow too, but they’re capable. I can’t wait to go home and check on what my Claudes were up to.Interconnects is a reader-supported publication. Consider becoming a subscriber.The feeling that I can’t shake is a deep urgency to move my agents from working on toy software to doing meaningful long-term tasks. We know Claude can do hours, days, or weeks, of fun work for us, but how do we stack these bricks into coherent long-term projects? This is the crucial skill for the next era of work.There are no hints or guides on working with agents at the frontier — the only way is to play with them. Instead of using them for cleanup, give them one of your hardest tasks and see what it gets stuck on, see what you can use it for.Software is becoming free, good decision making in research, design, and product has never been so valuable.Being good at using AI today is a better moat than working hard.Here are a collection of pieces that I feel like suitably grapple with the coming wave or detail real practices for using agents. It’s rare that so many of the thinkers in the AI space that I respect are all fixated on a single new tool, a transition period, and a feeling of immense change:* Import AI 441: My agents are working. Are yours? This helped me motivate to write this and focus on how important of a moment this is.* Steve Newman on Hyperproductivity with AI coding agents — importantly written before Claude Opus 4.5, which was a major step change.* Tim Dettmers on working with agents: Use Agents or Be Left Behind? * Steve Yegge on Latent Space on vibe coding (and how you’ll be left behind if you don’t understand how to do it).* Dean W. Ball: Among the Agents — why coding agents aren’t just for programmers. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.interconnects.ai/subscribe

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Hardware-Conscious Data Processing (ST 2023) - tele-TASK Prof. Dr. Tilmann Rabl Hardware development continuously advances, with different technologies improving at different pace. While the amount of transistors in a CPU package are growing, the single core performance is stagnating due to physical limitations. These trends require changes in data processing to keep database management systems efficient. In this lecture, we will take a look at current computer architectures and accelerator technologies and how they can be used for efficient data processing. We will cover CPU and memory architecture; the storage hierarchy; modern memory technolgoies, such as NVM and NVMe; fast interconnects, such as Infiniband, RDMA, and NVLink; and accelerators, such as GPUs and FPGAs. The course has a significant practical part, where the students learn to implement data structures and algorithms tailored to hardware concious data processing. Musical Tourism Synapset Synapset is a blitz collective formed in Barcelona, over a week in the beginning of April 2010 by Synapskollaps and reSet Sakrecoer. This album is based on experimenting with the risk of taking opportunities in life and reproduce them with machines. It questions the space existing between people and how music interconnects them. This album was written, recorded, mixed and mastered in 7 days.It's core formation is Synapskollaps and reSet Sakrecoer, with special appearance by Dr.Tikov and MC Charlot. Recorded In The FragleRock Studio v2.59, Barcelona. Cover photo by Patsy Boop, Edit by the Sakrecoer Design Robot. Mastered By Dr. Tikov9 tracks of pure kick and base!"Including amazing holiday pictures, healthy Sub-Vibes and pure feelings." - Basspistol.com"Congratulation on the release" - Goodkarma.ru Audistorium Stygian Catalyst Audistorium is a multi-genre spanning dark anthology audio drama created by Landon 'Lemon' Whisnant. From dread horror to absurdist comedy, Audistorium weaves a web of its own that interconnects It's stories in its own macabre, sometimes goofy way.Produced by Stygian Catalyst and co-creator of the Questionable Guide to Life Podcast.At the caring chiding of those close to us, we have decided to open up a way for people to contribute to the shows production, for the price of a simple cup of coffee, you can support Audistorium by clicking here for our Ko-Fi page.For contact, email us at [email protected],We can be found @AudistoriumPod on TwitterYou can find Landon <a href="https://open.acast.com/shows/653838418299010011ba94bc/episodes/@https://twitter.com/Lemjam The Undisputed Truth. Lily Stinson The undisputed truth…is within you.We’ll be diving into resonance beyond words. The truth we’re all searching for——LOVE. Simple. Direct. Digestible truth❤️ I’m not here to dull myself down and neither are you! A peak into limitless creation—- hosted by Lily (love)! I will reflect the truth within you——what interconnects and intertwines us all. Love. The simple truth humanity has forgotten about—-the cure of it all. The lion sleeps no more.

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This episode is 5 minutes long.

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This episode was published on January 21, 2026.

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Two weeks ago, I wrote a review of how Claude Code is taking the AI world by storm, saying that “software engineering is going to look very different by the end of 2026." That article captured the power of Claude as a tool and a product, and I...

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