When developers use Claude, ChatGPT, and Gemini on the same project—the chaos that ensues
同一個專案用 Claude、ChatGPT 和 Gemini 的開發者:混亂的代碼人生
Ever notice how different AI models give wildly different answers to the same coding problem? A developer using Claude for one feature, ChatGPT for another, and Gemini for a third is basically playing code roulette. Each AI has its own personality, coding style, and quirks—so your codebase ends up looking like it was written by three different people who've never met. Some parts are elegant, some are overcomplicated, and some just... work in ways you don't fully understand. It's the kind of technical debt that makes code reviews absolutely hilarious (and painful). The real question: which AI actually produces the best code for YOUR specific project?
OpenAI is hosting a livestream event. Details about the specific announcements, product launches, or demonstrations will be revealed during the broadcast.
The last time OpenAI did an unannounced livestream, they dropped GPT-4 Turbo and changed pricing overnight
OpinionsRead
ChatGPT Images 2.0
OpenAI is launching ChatGPT Images 2.0 with major upgrades to image generation capabilities. Watch the livestream announcement at https://openai.com/live/
OpenAI is positioning this as a direct competitor to established image generation tools, suggesting they're confident enough to challenge the current market leaders
OpinionsRead
The "just wait 6 months" argument from 2025 survived exactly one iteration
Throughout 2025 the standard response to any complaint about an LLM was some version of "just wait 3-6 months, the next generation will handle this effortlessly." The argument was everywhere. Every limitation was temporary, every missing capability was a few iterations away, every autonomous agent demo was a preview of imminent reality.
It's April 2026 now and worth checking how that held up.
On r/ClaudeAI this week there's a long thread about Opus 4.7 where multiple users argue it's a regress
OpinionsRead
Mistral Medium 3.5 on AMD Strix Halo: Painfully Slow (Plan for Overnight Runs)
Someone actually tested Mistral Medium 3.5 on AMD's new Strix Halo chip, and the results are... not great. For a 48k-token prompt with 4k thinking tokens, it took about 2 hours just to get an answer about code architecture. Yeah, you read that right—two hours. The takeaway: if you want to run this locally on Strix Halo, queue it up before bed. The technical setup involved heavy optimization (Q5_K_XL quantization, GPU acceleration with -ngl 999, cache reuse), but even with all that tuning, it's still a crawl. Not exactly the "instant local AI" dream, but hey, at least it works.