Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin

Hello! OP here, a lot of comments have this common theme of wondering if this is overloading / context switching / the brain thrashing.

Helped me surface an important distinction on why it doesn't really happen for me. I think there's three parts to it:

1. I work on only one thing at a time, and try to keep chunks meaty

2. I make sure my agents can run a lot longer so every meaty chunk gets the time it deserves, and I'm not babysitting every change in parallel, that would be horrible! (how I do this is what this post focuses on)

3. New small items that keep coming up / bug fixes get their own thread in the middle of the flow when they do come up, so I can fire and forget, come back to it when I have time. This works better for me because I'm not also thinking about these X other bugs that are pending, and I can focus on what I'm currently doing.

What I had to figure out was how to adapt this workflow to my strengths (I love reviewing code and working on one thing at a time, but also get distracted easily). For my trade-offs, it was ideal to offload context to agents whenever a new thing pops up, so I continue focusing on my main task.

The # of PRs might look huge (and they are to me), but I'm focusing on one big chonky thing a day, the others are smaller things, which together mean progress on my product is much faster than it otherwise would be.



Consider applying for YC's Summer 2026 batch! Applications are open till May 4

Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: