This all feels like a race where the model companies try to solve doing work locally in a way that doesn't suck, before the major operating systems companies figure out AI integration into their OS that doesn't suck. It also makes me wonder why Google which has both Gemini and Android can't figure this out, and if there are lessons to draw from that.
Google is historically terrible as a product company (and has succeeded in spite of that) As their technical innovations become less of a moat (we're already there) they won't be able to win on engineering alone (they are no longer winning on engineering alone)
As a person who gets paid to make Chrome (CEF really) do its bidding, I would say Chrome is really as close to an OS as it can get, as in I've found API or service typically an OS or an external tool would provide, that wasn't built into Chrome.
How are Google products anything but outstanding in their categories? What are you comparing to?
Which products are outstanding in their categories?<p>Gmail isn't outstanding, search isn't outstanding, maps isn't outstanding.<p>They are all pretty par for the course. Google <i>used</i> to be outstanding... but I'm not sure of a single product they have that is outstanding (def: significantly better than the competition) anymore. On the other hand I rarely use any google products these days, so maybe I'm not the one to be judging.
I'm not a fan of Google, and also not attached to Apple or Microsoft, so this isn't me trying to stan for Google, but I'd like to request that you give examples of what competing products are categorically better (and, by what metric(s) you're judging - code quality? stability? robust set of features?) -- for Gmail, Docs/Drive/etc, Google Calendar, Maps, Classroom, YouTube.<p>As far as I can tell, if judged by the marketplace (and breaking ties with which product I like better), Google has run away with the ball on all of those, and Gemini seems to at least be competitive.<p>The only <i>major</i> product I'd say they've sunk below acceptability on is Search, which is demonstrably dogshit now...though I suspect it's more that they have changed their definition of what Search is for, from "helping users efficiently find other websites that are useful to them" to "A convenient on-ramp to, many times per day, capture the current user intent and steer them toward something that earns Google some ad revenue."
The major differentiating factor that Google has had in every product category is that their products are free and you have to deal with ads (and they monitor your behavior for profiling you and your interests).<p>GMail and Google Maps were revolutionary when they came out, sure, but the vast majority of Google's products now are... fine? at best? And a lot of their "big products" were acquisitions that they absorbed in order to further the core goal of the business - to organize all the world's information and use it to serve ads to people.<p>Meanwhile, Google has a litany of products they've started internally, launched, ran for a while, and then let stagnate or canned entirely; anecdotally I've heard that this is because your bonuses at Google hinge on your ability to launch a product and not your ability to support a product, so it's beneficial to get something launched and then immediately leave to go launch another project rather than polish the one you just launched into something to be proud of.<p>I'm not sure if that's true, but it would certainly explain a lot; if Google launches something and it's bad or it doesn't click, they just give up on it. Google Wave, a half-dozen chat apps that I can think of, Stadia, and dozens of others. Things that Google launched, which had problems or didn't hit mass adoption instantly, and then just petered out and were retired with all of the time and energy and money put into them arguably wasted - products that people wanted, and wanted to succeed, but which weren't revolutionary successes at launch so they weren't worth further investment.<p>Meanwhile, they (and most of the industry) are pushing AI for some reason despite the fact that almost no one actually wants AI to be the only way that people interact with information.<p>This all reinforces what I've been saying about Google for decades: they're not creating things that users want to use, they're creating things that they want users to use. Sometimes those things align, but when they don't then it's not worth further investment (except, apparently, AI).
> GMail and Google Maps were revolutionary when they came out, sure, but the vast majority of Google's products now are... fine? at best?<p>Is that... good? I mean take maps -- what more can possibly be done to that product that wouldn't just make it worse? It's <i>done</i>. The fact that's the default choice for mapping and just works is fantastic really. There aren't any competitors doing anything revolutionary either because there isn't anything revolutionary to be done.
I just don’t think your opinion is shared by most people.<p>Gmail is the most popular email service in the world, people are always telling me how they prefer Google Docs over everything else and their only competition is Microsoft.<p>Yes it’s free but there is no other service that I rather switch to, and I actually pay for additional storage.
You can’t beat free. The Fastmail web interface is snappier than gmail. And you can’t beat dedicated mail clients like thunderbolt in terms of workflow.<p>Google doc is wordpad level with very good collaboration (but that’s mostly what people need). People were fine with typewriters, so they are fine with a word processor like google doc. But it’s not at the level of even Libreoffice or Apple’s page in terms of features.
By any definition of good usability, Gmail is not good and Google Docs are not far behind. It’s not that they are functionally bad, just really poor UX.
I worked at google for 3 years and can confirm what you've heard. Obviously, every org is somewhat different.
I think it’s a major feature gap that Gmail (paid or free) cannot create filters on headers.<p>I also can’t do wildcard filters on “to” or “from”. For example, in my GApps I have it set up to route all emails not associated with a specific user to my primary user. So that it’s easier to make throwaway emails. I want to filter all to:`X.X@domain.tld` to a certain folder. No can do.<p>It just feels restricted.
> but I'd like to request that you give examples of what competing products are categorically better<p>Personally I much prefer Fastmail to Gmail. The site is way faster and more cohesively designed. Fastmail supports jmap, and way more imap extensions (including push support on Apple mail). They have helpful humans handling support requests. And they do all of that with what seems like 1/10th or less the number of employees.<p>The only thing I like more about Gmail is their native mobile apps. Fastmail’s official mobile app is a web view.
Funny. Search is the only thing that is outstanding as it is the big revenue arm, that and youtube.<p>The last time i tried using gmaps i got ads and the thing could figure out where i was on the roads. It was comical as i always remembered google maps being better than apple. Today tho, apple beats them hands down.<p>Googles products that do not get cancelled are pretty mediocre in todays market. They can build useful things but if it doesnt have ads in it, it gets axed
Has hacker news lost it?<p>Maps & Gmail & Search all have plenty of accumulating flaws... but they also completely defined their product category and today are among the most popular software products ever made.
"defined their product category" means it used to be outstanding, not that it currently is outstanding.<p>"among the most popular" doesn't need either of those to be true.
Wow I wonder why maps and gmail are extremely popular by the company that controls the largest browser, search, android, and advertising. It's based solely on their merits and not abusing their monopolistic position to thwart competition right?
They are popular because they are free.<p>I have to use Gmail at work and it is just terrible.
Garmin was and is better than Google Maps and Mapquest was better than Google Maps when you needed to print directions. If Google didn’t have Android would maps matter as much?<p>Apple Maps and Waze is better for directions. Apple has better CarPlay integration and HUD. Google Maps is way better at searching for things like restaurants or local businesses but not as much the nav part.
All of these are outstanding! In so far they are not <i>singular</i> or <i>new</i> anymore, well... If for the past ~20 years nobody has come up with something clearly better, then I would say that speaks to how outstanding the product that are being copied are to this day.
Search has degraded for sure, but still better than anything else? Maps - I guess you mean Apple ones are better? Can't tell, I am not on Apple, but if you don't use Apple products, there are not many alternatives to Google maps
> Gmail isn't outstanding, search isn't outstanding, maps isn't outstanding<p>They were at the time.
Google Cloud is great, compared to legacy and fragmented AWS
Yeah it's great until they absolutely destroy you like Unisuper or Railway.<p>Support is part of the package when it comes to product and their support SUCKS.<p>I would absolutely NEVER use GCP for any business I was in charge of. Google cannot be trusted.
I agree, but it’s definitely getting worse. It’s a <i>lot</i> less focused than it was.
I think you’re talking about consumer products.<p>At the enterprise level, if you know of something better than Bigquery, please let me know.<p>Similarly, Kubernetes and Kubeflow are both outstanding - and Licenses Kubernetes has no meaningful competition for what it does - but Google did everyone a solid by making them open source, so you can get them from other sources than Google. But the Google managed versions are certainly extremely good.<p>As for the idea that Gmail, search, and Maps aren’t outstanding, an easy way to refute that is to ask what the outstanding alternatives are. I doubt there’s a single list that many people would agree on.
What's wrong with Maps?
It's … okay … but it still falls down in a fair few areas? It's crap at finding restrooms. Finding a stop on the road is also difficult, as it seems like it just defaults to a basic radial search, when as a driver you want things down-route, not radially out. All the AI in the world can't seem to figure out when I'm looking for gas or food that closed businesses are not results I want to see. It eats enough CPU to melt phones, such that <i>Android now has built-in support for this?!</i>¹. Attempting to report things often goes in vain². Some of the notifications need work ("object in road ahead" … I'd kill for what lane! this one is just anxiety in a notification), and it'd be nice to see the lane designations ahead of time (it only shows them once you're like <1mi out). I've never gotten the AI-home detection to work. Attempting to navigate to the house of anyone with an Irish name gets me a bar, and the forced-voice-navigation when in a car means I have to be able to pronounce the destination. Google does not seem to grok that sometimes … there's a person in the car who is designated navigator. They can type, it's fine. Some turn directions could be better if you incorporate more precise language into them³. Some directions could be abbreviated "Navigate to I-4 North": I live here, I don't need step-by-step hand-holding to the interstate, but I'd like to plug in the destination before the car is rolling.<p>¹literally, phones can now demand you put them in A/C b/c they're dying<p>²I reported once that a jetway was 3D modeled as being like 8 stories high. Google couldn't confirm that, and closed the request. I reported a business as not being present, <i>while my GPS showed me as being at the alleged address</i>, that <i>also</i> couldn't be confirmed. My GPS trace would have seen me walk the whole block, twice!<p>³as designated navigator in my relationship, I can tell her "leftish" or "rightish", and she understands what I mean. Where I live a lot of the intersections' designs appear as if a civil engineer was given artistic license, and so sometimes the direction is "5-way intersection, left-ish". "Left" is a bad direction <i>when there are two lefts.</i> Of course … me & her have developed a fairly extensive lexicon over years of long road trips, too.
After 20 years of consumer GPS goog offers Sub-Garmin quality navigation service, and a generous helping of UI non-intuitives.
I find Apple's Maps directions to be slightly better, nowadays. They're more intuitive.
... 20 years of not remembering that I only ever want to see distances in km
Ok. Apparently you missed the question from OP.<p>What are you comparing to?
The Pixel series outside of security (to which their own flavor of Android doesn't even take advantage of like we see with GrapheneOS) doesn't have any particular outliers that would make it any more or less enticing than another company's phone.<p>Their ChromeOS hardware was nice but had lackluster software and by the time it was EoL'd, never got the love of ChromeOS-present.<p>Google TV generally gets outpaced by onn (Walmart's brand) on cost and value proposition.<p>And also the fact they have shown time and time again that they just kill products over and over again.
Other than search, in its heyday of the early 00’s, every google product success was either a 20% time project (e.g. Gmail) or an acquisition (YouTube) or a direct clone of someone else’s working product (android).
I think both can be true. Google has a history of annoying churn while still being good enough (or just … being large enough) that switching to competitors is still too high a cost for most.<p>For example, their "chat" app has churned 3? 4? times now? Their assistant app has churned from whatever the OG assistant was to now Gemini. Wave churned to "+" in the social category, and that's dead now.<p>The default placement in Android probably helps a <i>lot</i>, or other things, like forced signups into adjacent products (e.g., like + was doing for a while).
> For example, their "chat" app has churned 3? 4? times now?<p>I believe they’ve had at least 58 different products with chat / messaging.<p><a href="https://www.reddit.com/r/google/comments/s2s2ld/all_of_googles_messaging_products/" rel="nofollow">https://www.reddit.com/r/google/comments/s2s2ld/all_of_googl...</a>
Have you tried to admin a large team using Google's admin? :(
Do they have any supported way to export a user's account (e-mail, calendars, etc) for offline archiving yet? I used to have to reset their password, disable their 2FA, log in as their user, initiate a 'Takeout' request to export their account data into an archive, wait until the request was done (between minutes and days depending on the account), download it manually (often in chunks if it was large enough), store it somewhere, and then delete it and delete the account.<p>I can't imagine that no other 'Google Workspace' organizations want to actually save their employee data rather than irrevocably delete it forever.
Arguably, "exceptional" products are not ones that can vanish on a whim, like a great, great many of Google products have. Or they actually compete with other products in the same space, like a great, great many of Google products have not. Also, one would argue a good product is not one that is bought out and then deliberately destroyed to prevent its expansion into or development of a market for itself. Google is an advertising company with tremendous reach because of a handful of very aggressive and very fortunate business decisions that successfully exploded. It now uses its massive influence to exert market pressure, but the market does not always bend to its whim because sometimes it does things wrong, some of those products it pushes fail, and I can only assume some products are slaughtered because of projections on their performance regardless of their quality or utility.<p><a href="https://killedbygoogle.com/" rel="nofollow">https://killedbygoogle.com/</a>
An email client (Gmail app) that is 500mb? What’s _outstanding_ about that? Almost everything Google makes now is terrible. Try some alternatives.
Maybe you are not counting the products they kill.
The about 7 different text chat applications they had?<p>At some point GoogleTalk was one of the leading global text messengers, and then it was basically destroyed by Google itself.
Depending on what you mean by 'chat', Google has had a lot, but this list includes a lot more than 7 text chat services. <a href="https://www.reddit.com/r/google/comments/s2s2ld/all_of_googles_messaging_products/" rel="nofollow">https://www.reddit.com/r/google/comments/s2s2ld/all_of_googl...</a>
> The about 7 different text chat applications they had?<p>All of them named "Hangouts" no doubt.
Outstanding?<p>Well ...<p><a href="https://killedbygoogle.com/" rel="nofollow">https://killedbygoogle.com/</a>
On a semi-related note, I bought a Pixel phone about a month ago, and I'm shocked by how unpolished it is. I've had so many little annoyances pop up, issues I never had on other android phones. Keyboard hiding/appearing when it's not suppose to, bluetooth dropping, WiFi dropping, network switching taking forever, screen becoming unresponsive... It's mostly all small things, but they really start to add up after a while.
They are releasing AluminumOS with their Googlebooks, which is a AI forward OS. If its good or not we have yet to see.
It's looking like a slightly updated reskin of chromeOS with gemini features built in.<p>Definitely not a developer machine based on how they presented it in google IO. So if you write software, it's not looking like it'll be relevant whatsoever. I hope to be proven wrong.
"What do you mean, an Aluminum Falcon?!"
Google is probably already doing and releasing the most actual research into this (like the work that went into Gemma 4)
Microsoft has Copilot and Windows. Look what happened.
Folks that are interested in a way of doing work locally that doesn't suck, but which integrates LLMs, may be interested in [Barnum](<a href="https://barnum-circus.github.io/" rel="nofollow">https://barnum-circus.github.io/</a>). The TLDR is that it's a programming language whose frontend is a DSL in TypeScript that is well suited for managing async and parallel work, focused on control flow, from which it is easy to invoke LLMs, and which is easy for LLMs to write. I use it to autonomously ship a very large number of PRs.
The only lesson I'm taking away is that we are still very early in the AI era. AI workflows look entirely different today than they did 18 months ago and I wouldn't bet on them looking the same in 18 months from now.
> why Google which has both Gemini and Android can't figure this out,<p>Not the first time an incumbent has four aces in hand and appears to be entirely unable to make anything of it.<p>> and if there are lessons to draw from that<p>Lesson 1: doing shit is hard<p>Lesson 2: money rules so milking the cow wins over taking the slightest risk
Don't you read HN? Nobody wants AI in their OS, especially in Windows. Common complaint that Microsoft is forcing AI into every corner of Windows.
I didn’t get a screenshot of this, but I just found a really pointed example of Anthropics lack of craft / rush to build. If you open Claude on Windows, and click Dispatch (under cowork) to start that up, it will tell you that you need permissions windows doesn’t have. When you click the buttons for those permissions, it has broken links to macOS system preferences. I really encourage someone to try it and post the images as a reply as I am writing this from my phone.
I don't know where's a good place to post a screenshot, but can confirm I get a dialog saying:<p>> Get an app to open this 'x-apple.systempreferences' link<p>> Your PC doesn't have an app that can open this link. Try looking for a compatible app in the Microsoft Store.
I run Claude Desktop inside a Hyper-V VM. My VM doesn't have the "Virtual Machine Platform" feature installed at all. The app accepts this and simply disables the Cowork tab. I wonder if there's some other way to block the creation of the VM to force Claude Desktop onto this code path without having to uninstall Hyper-V.<p>That said, Claude (both Desktop and CLI) ships on Windows without any sandboxing support for Code. They only have sandboxing for Linux and macOS. If you need to run it on Windows, I really recommend running it in an isolated VM, which then allows you to omit the "Virtual Machine Platform" feature in the VM and solves this issue. The "Windows Sandbox" OS feature provides such a VM without needing another Windows license.
The VM itself is for Claude Cowork which does all work within the VM sandbox. That doesn't help answer why they spin it up immediately and don't have a way to disable it though. Just the "why it exists" question.
If you're not going to give Claude access to anything on your machine, why are you using Desktop instead of web chat? (Real question, I don't use these much!)<p>If you are, obviously you need the VM.
At least in a corporate environment, Claude Desktop is a pretty decent compromise. Preconfigured internally deployed MCP servers and third-party connectors make many of the necessary integrations relatively easy to control.<p>I use Claude Code CLI myself (inside a VM, to isolate it from the host) for >90% of my needs. For the remaining fraction - email scours, cloud drive searches, other third-party connections - the desktop application is <i>surprisingly decent</i>. I don't even have more than half a dozen connectors enabled. In the VM I have separate, personally managed access tokens available for various third-party services. Wouldn't really try to maintain more than 5-6, otherwise it gets too confusing. [ß]<p>The desktop application mostly Just Works[tm] with SSO. At least when M365 doesn't suffer from their 4-times-a-day auth outage.<p>ß: A lot of APIs and authentication systems were designed in the stone age. You either need a 1:1 permissioned access token that can do horrendous damage, or you deal with ultra-granular, confusing and ill-designed scoping jungle where nothing makes sense. Atlassian, I'm looking at you especially. At least an MCP server, provisioned with a reasonably done service account, doesn't have all of <i>your</i> powers to get things wrong with.
I do use Claude Cowork and hence the VM is important, but I also leave the desktop app running all the time since I have many scheduled tasks at different times. The thing is that the VM could shutdown after being idle for some amount of time and then fire back up when you are ready to use it.
There's such a spectrum between "give it everything" and "give it nothing". Imagine you just want to use it to code and want to make sure any commands it runs doesn't mess up your actual machine.
It mounts specified directories into the vm from what I remember
Probably because they vibecoded it
Anthropic has pretty consistently been shitty about how they roll out their software. Extreme lack of engineering rigor and thoughtfulness.<p>The answer is probably as simple as "no one thought not to do that."<p>---<p>I know different people work on these things so I can't do more than guess about how engineering culture cuts across teams, but given the sheer amount of carelessness and sloppiness in Anthropic's software I have to imagine they're burning investor money in training and inference because the code to do it is as bad as the rest of their software.
It kind of does though. If you want to use the product they'll need the sandbox ready.
I won't understand why Cowork isn't simply opt-in. It also installs a ~10GB vm bundle which you cannot remove<p><a href="https://www.reddit.com/r/ClaudeAI/comments/1rlc71n/claude_desktop_app_silently_downloads_a_13_gb" rel="nofollow">https://www.reddit.com/r/ClaudeAI/comments/1rlc71n/claude_de...</a>
Rule 1 with making number go up is you eliminate friction at all costs. The user's hard drive is free to you, so there's no reason to gate a feature you want them to use based on that. 98% of them will have no idea you're foisting garbage on them.
RIP, every base model mac from the past 10 years with the <= 256GB SSD. Including the new Neo. When you consider how much of that is eaten up by the system, swap space, caches, reserved space to download OS updates, and apps (2GB a piece is far from uncommon) -- having less than 15GB free is completely unsurprising on that size disk.
It was on my machine at least, I remember I had to do an additional install to activate that tab...
Back in the day, personalization / customization was all the rage, as it lets the user feel the control, power and freedom. Now it's the opposite. It's about not letting user to have any control at all. I can't delete some junk apps from my phone and mac, because they are "system" apps. As a non-geek, I can't deal with complexity of the browser and account settings to stop it from what is doing. We are at the mercy of the machines.
It hurts to have all this control stripped away. Once upon a time, you bought iLife (suite of iPhoto, iMovie, etc) on a CD or DVD and installed it. Today, you physically cannot delete the Photos app no matter what.<p>On my work computer, where I never manage any photos, have no iCloud account and never will, I have to keep this app installed and anytime I so much as AirDrop a png to my computer I am prompted to "Add to Photos" with it. No thank you.<p>The .app is actually only 41MB, so obviously they've moved the majority of it to some mystery-meat libraries or frameworks installed elsewhere anyway.
Isn’t it good that it spins up without no way of stopping it? Why would it be a problem that we do have a way of stopping it?
> Claude Desktop spins up a VM without no way of stopping it<p>I frequently make this error when I talk. My brain thinks of different ways to phrase what I want to say, but when I speak it starts with one and finishes with another. The result is almost always wrong in the way the title is, ie some variant of a double negation.<p>Sometimes it happens when I type, though I try to read it multiple times so often catch it.
When you realize that in some languages, for instance, in Spanish, double-negatives are not just tolerated, but correct, it helps you to let go of this particular type of pedantry when it accidentally appears in an English sentence.
All your RAM are belong to us
Op is nitpicking on the poorly written title. I came here to find that comment :)
This question is answered by the post? There is reportedly actually no way of stopping it happen. Perhaps the poster had a brain fart while typing it. Maybe they speak a different dialect of English from you.
[dead]
I agree. Why is this a problem?
Understand that it is annoying to spin up a heavyweight VM whenever running Claude Desktop, but I actually think per-app + agent virtualization is the future. Next version of an app is:<p><pre><code> 1. micro VM
2. agent on the VM
3. software bundled into the VM
</code></pre>
Then the agent is totally sandboxed at the hardware virtualization level. It can use the software tools on the VM or write its own. VM can control which software is "frozen" and which is open to agent modification. And VM can also control which services are exposed outside the VM through sockets, HTTP server, X window system, whatever<p>It's self-modifying apps that are sealed off from touching parts of the computer they shouldn't.
Not sure if this is deliberate or not but you're describing Docker Sandbox extremely closely. <a href="https://www.docker.com/products/docker-sandboxes/" rel="nofollow">https://www.docker.com/products/docker-sandboxes/</a>
Yeah, Docker Sandbox is in the right direction. But there's a lot of parts that are still not ironed out yet.<p>How do you package a Docker Sandbox up into an app that can expose UI widgets, with an agent hiding behind them? What widgets is the agent allowed to modify? How do you run a workflow like "give agent all these files, modify the files, and do changeset management on the modifications?"<p>I'm not 100% sure which part of these will be baked into the application standard format, and which are orthogonal. But current way of packaging up and running these agents doesn't feel right.<p>I think about this a lot because my startup is building cloud VMs for agents to do code-gen and auto-validate changes, so we have a workflow like:<p><pre><code> 1. git repo, skills, CLI tools, biz context goes in
2. agent iterates against running dev environment
3. changes go out into git PRs and CI
</code></pre>
I think this type of app/agent workflow will expand outside coding use-cases.
Yep, I've been using a local vm-centric agent setup for about 3 months, and it works great. I think there is also value in the fact that with a local VM, you can have the same public IP address, so you're not relying on an EC2 EIP that may be blacklisted somewhere.
Vibecoded with AGI, production ready.
I’ve stopped using Claude on the desktop, just because of how <i>slow</i> the app is to start up and interact with. It’s an absolute clunker; I’m mystified why they can’t ship something that works well given their rhetoric about ai.
They vibecoded it, and admitted as much. Once it was able to self-vibecode, that's all they did. That's why it's written in React and uses gigabytes of RAM as a chat client.
Not only did they decide to write a terminal application in React, but it's 500K lines of code. It's strange because I'm sure Claude is capable of writing a decent TUI in C. It says a lot about the engineering culture at Anthropic, at least on the software side.
Oh, a nice subthread place to vent. Their CLI is so f tragic that it is ridiculous. It keeps scrambling the terminal, scroll and basic shortcuts keep breaking, I've used so many tuis and terminal apps and many of them are a single man operation and a side project and I have never seen anything so bad.<p>If I didn't know from experience that directed properly claude can be powerful, knowing that they used it to create that CLI would be instant runaway based on very reasonable heuristics - if they are not able to use their product to create a decent piece of software that is not even sophisticated then it seems futile for me to try.<p>I just do not understand. I feel like most HN could vibe code better claude CLI in claude than the CLI (and certainly just write one) than what we have to deal with to use subscription.
I could not agree more that Claude itself is a janky, hacky, crappy piece of software.<p>When management at $DAYJOB brought the hammer down and said, "Everyone has to use genAI all the time, OR ELSE," I expected to be blown away by the tool I was avoiding due to ethical concerns, aesthetic objections, humanism, and long-term thinking.<p>I was born away, but not in a good way.<p>The CLI is _bad_. I've seen it randomly fail to render anything at all on the terminal multiple times. It has a vim-mode, but it's painfully buggy, and I can literally outrun it - if I try to type too quickly after hitting Esc for normal mode, it just doesn't return to normal mode. It's I was keeping track of the bugs in the Claude TUI, but gave up because it was taking _too much of my time_ to do so.<p>If nothing else, I'd say Claude shows convincingly that success is not the default for vibecoding.<p>Yes, it technically does the job, and no, I don't think I've ever used a worse TUI.
Had to make a decision for a TUI I'm working on and opted for curses rather than something like textual. If I wasn't using an LLM to do some of the plumbing I'd probably have used textual to avoid the inconvenience.<p>There's a lot of opportunity to leverage LLMs to make codebases <i>less</i> bloated and less reliant on complex but human user friendly dependencies that not many people seem to be taking advantage of.
This is about the desktop app, not the claude code TUI
You say that as if somehow the trend for cross platform desktop apps to be ridiculously bloated bundles of browser overlays is new?<p>What major cross platform app isn't based on Electron or Tauri? Slack, Discord, VS Code, Teams, Notion...
> What major cross platform app isn't based on Electron or Tauri?<p>Calibre, VLC, all the jetbrains suite, Sublime, Unity, Unreal, CodeBlocks, Adobe’s stuff,…
Though one would hope that they could leverage their advanced models to create native software per platform that can perform better.
The ChatGPT app on macOS is native. Same for the Gemini app.
Claude Code is uniquely stupid in that it uses React to power a non-Electron terminal app.
You'd think Artificial Intelligence could be used to find a better path forward, alas.
Now I only need non-engineers to understand this difference in architecture and design decisions, and I will have a job.
Let me know when we have actual AI and we can get right on it.
I thought they were all in on agentic coding? They are probably just building at a surface level with only an eye towards shipping, without considering the impact of all the changes. I've seen less and less coordination between engineers as well under that model. If that's the case (Claude Code is this way). it is sort of what you get, no matter the rhetoric about "make sure to review all your changes!" It's always trade offs.
I uninstalled it because I have no need for Claude Desktop and there’s no way to keep the 10+ GiB VM image off of my machine
I'm with you. I have the Claude web app pinned as a PWA for quick queries, and then use the CLI for everything project-based.<p>I did consider experimenting with the Routines feature on the desktop app, but I'm leaning towards whipping together something with cron. I saw another poster here who has a daily PR summary routine that I think would be handy, as I have quite a few repos where I'm a sporadic contributor but would like to keep tabs.
It is surprising that the Claude web app lags pretty easily when using either chromium or firefox on ubuntu linux. Chats that delay my laptop work without issues on my ipad or iphone using the app.<p>The web app is definitely a bit of a problem. IF there is a native app on desktop or if claude cli is much faster, i haven't tried them.
Guaranteed nobody is reading the code being merged in. It's vibes all the way down.
Classic Anthropic, this comes across as LLM coded nonsense.
I think the title should be changed. Either with no way of stopping it, or without any way of stopping it.
"without no way" of stopping it?
Why are the UIs of the AI companies all broken in multiple ways?
They're some of the only new UIs to be made in the last decade. Almost everyone else stays in the browser (or something close like electron- claude code is actually mostly written in React, they couldn't get far from web dev). The problem is they need to interact with the local filesystem, and not many people have built apps for such a wide range of devices in a long time, and of that small talent pool I bet most are corpo coders- moving too slow and to focused on "the right way" to actually ship more than detailed Jira tickets. They also don't have time for stable releases because competition is so fierce.<p>But I almost always think of things from a talent-pool-first perspective. Perhaps there are actual technical issues like what Boris was referring to.
> The problem is they need to interact with the local filesystem, and not many people have built apps for such a wide range of devices in a long time,<p>Did all the Qt developers go to mars?
Luckily for them, every OS has (at least one) native way of building applications, and with the power of AI they could easily make 3 different desktop UIs, while reusing the same core logic.
If only there was an easy high-level language that's taught to first year students that allows them to write once, run anywhere.<p>If they're too lazy to learn java, haxe has hxwidgets[0]. Haxe is pretty damn close to js. If a dev can't handle that, they should turn in their keyboard and get a job that doesn't require a brain, like being a senator or federal judge.<p>[0] <a href="https://haxeui.org/getting-started/haxeui-hxwidgets/" rel="nofollow">https://haxeui.org/getting-started/haxeui-hxwidgets/</a>
There are lots of good answers in this thread but I think it's because they are AI companies and not UI companies. When you look at tools like AnythingLLM, OpenCode, pi, etc. you see all kinds of different interfaces, and while they might make disagreeable choices at least they do it with intentionality and direction.
They are dogfooding their products like you wouldnt believe<p>They are releasing at breakneck pace, it's pretty funny how vibed their products feel sometimes
Many people will say it’s because of the slop. I think it’s because they have no product vision. The roadmap is pretty much a random walk, which combined with the velocity of agentic coding is like digging a moat with atomic bombs.
> Why are the UIs of the AI companies all broken in multiple ways?<p>Because they're vibe-coded ultra sloppy code. And it really shows.
No one left who could fix anything here by hand. Being able to handcraft compelling desktop apps and their plumbing is not a marketable skill anymore.<p>Mythos, Fable, please do the thing with the VM. Make no mistakes.
Dogfood
They are moving at breakneck speed deploying on scales most of us can't even imagine. They are working in a space that's completely unexplored where getting information as quickly as possible is preferred above iterating on some feature until it's "done" while your competitor has released fifteen other features, all sucky, but one of which turns out to be a killer and makes a billion bucks overnight.
> They are moving at breakneck speed deploying on scales most of us can't even imagine. They are working in a space that's completely unexplored where getting information as quickly as possible is preferred above iterating on some feature until it's "done" while your competitor has released fifteen other features, all sucky, but one of which turns out to be a killer and makes a billion bucks overnight.<p>Not on the client, they're not. It's a chatbot as glue between different backend systems.
Whatever you say, account created 9 minutes ago with 1 comment posted 6 minutes ago praising AI companies.
The weird thing is that this is probably a performance optimization for quick responses when a user asks a question.<p>My agent harness spins up a VM too, but it spins up on demand, cools down in 10 minutes and warms up when I focus back on the app.<p>The files it works on actually lives in a mount.<p>People take more time to type a prompt than the VM takes to spin up on a fast machine and on a slow machine, the cooldown naturally frees RAM back to the machine.
I had my admin disable cowork a month ago and that worked. Has it resumed since then?
I also discovered this while
noticing my Mac was low on storage, I only clicked on cowork once and after deleting it from the folder i’m scared to
open the cowork tab coz ik it’ll just fill up the space
lol, why even use Claude desktop? I want Claude code to stop eating up 10s of gb of virtual memory
Is it just me, but this feels like Claude gets to have a nigh-impenetrable black box right on your machine and you have no idea what is going on inside it.<p>After all, the last time I encountered Hyper-V it was in the context of copy protection that prevented crackers from observing or interfering with video game protection
As long as the VM closes when the application closes, I don’t see too much of an issue with this design decision.<p>It seems like the VM is a core part of how you use the application.
Apart from you have no idea what's going on in the VM. It's not as it has a virtual terminal. I'll play the skeptic archetype: What's not to say they're transmitting all prompts back HQ?<p>Don't be naive and don't think they don't already do this.<p>Why not ask itself and see what it says about it. "Claude, why are you running in a virtual machine and what are you doing?".<p>/shrug
Claude transmits all prompts back to HQ as a part of its basic functionality.<p>If you are using an AI system to read your codebase from your local folder and make changes, whether or not you have a VM running or not is inconsequential. The Claude extension and/or CLI doesn’t need a VM to send code back to the mothership, you’re already running an executable program and granting it directory access.<p>Whether you trust a company as a vendor is typically based on their privacy policy, EULA, and your contract with them (if applicable). Those are the bits that have legal enforceability.
Is Claude self-replicating in an attempt for world domination?
It's becoming self-aware! Quick, lock down the nuclear codes!
They must not have used Fable 5 to vibecode that part of Claude Desktop, VMs are strictly forbidden high stakes cybersecurity work.
I have two friends that are using coding agents on Windows, which was surprising to learn.<p>Edit: yes, with WSL2 I believe in both cases.<p>I would have assumed almost everyone would get a Mac/Linux computer to use coding agents because Unix is their "native" platform. It's Bash tool calls all the way down.<p>Does anyone know a source for reliable data on what coding agent apps devs are using? How many are using Code Claude CLI vs Claude Desktop, etc?
Wsl2.0 is literally a Linux vm built into windows. I imagine some people are using that.
Are you sure they're not using WSL2 (which is Linux, not Windows)?
I mean I’m using coding agents on windows, because I’m not just going to learn a whole new operating system just to make robots write code for me.<p>I want tools that meet me where I’m at, not tools that demand I change up my entire UX to interact with them.<p>The assumption is not “what’s wrong with Windows that it doesn’t work with <technology>,” more “what’s wrong with <technology> that it doesn’t work with Windows”<p>Why wouldn’t you want your thing to be cross platform
> without no way<p>Not no way not no how!
Safari > Add to Dock > done
I've stopped using cc a while ago, because it always comes up with new surprises like that.
Please edit the title.<p>Currently "Claude Desktop spins up a VM without no way of stopping it"<p>Should be "Claude Desktop spins up a VM with no way of stopping it"
the vm makes sense for cowork but no off switch is weird. a visible sandbox on/off toggle would do more for trust than any safety blogpost imo
i had to uninstall it due to the vm taking around 12G of disk, never touched Cowork. didn't realize they were also launching it
How come Claude Code still hasn't triaged and fixed this? Feed it the bug link, someone.
and on my Mac any time I accidentally click Cowork which I don't use whatsoever, it re-makes the same VM, without asking me. It's one of the dumbest things ever. You're about to hijack nearly 20GB of my storage (which gets eaten up as it is) and you don't think to ask me if I even want the VM before you shove one into my system?
with no way or without no way?
People trust skynet.<p>People are very foolish. The younger generation needs to watch the Terminator franchise - it is all explained there.
it took up 12gb on mine
And if they didn't users would instead be whining that it ran rm -rf on their root directory. Sometimes it seems like the people here just want to act like insufferable neckbeards for no good reason.
When was the last time Claude's C Compiler was updated? 4 months ago? [0]<p>It is written in Rust™, surely it is better than the rest of them.<p>[0] <a href="https://github.com/anthropics/claudes-c-compiler" rel="nofollow">https://github.com/anthropics/claudes-c-compiler</a>
13 GIGS! Between that and the absorbent space MACOS sucks up, it's challenging.
kill -9
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So a company which has access to practically unlimited tokens and their best models makes crappy software. Huh who would've thought?<p>/s