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Hi HN, solo builder here.

Floyd is an open-source booking kernel for AI agents: TTL holds -> confirm, explicit 409 conflicts, and idempotency keys to prevent double-bookings under concurrency.

Docs: https://docs.floyd.run

Repo (Apache 2.0): https://github.com/floyd-run/engine

Early dev preview, would love feedback on API semantics + edge cases.


Working on Floyd (https://floyd.run) — an AI agent/workflow runtime for bringing LLM agents to production. Still shaping the MVP and figuring out where it adds the most value. Would love feedback from anyone building or deploying agents, or working with n8n/Make.


It's really cool concept. Just keep going, I wonder how it will look like in 1-2 years.


I agree with you. People using this kind of service likely already have some self-awareness about their social media habits. In the end, self-discipline and personal boundaries might be a better solution than relying on external tools. But I think we can also consider this as another approach to finding a better solution.


Oh yes, I should have looked at it before posting :(


No worries. I clicked and browsed for a bit and thought- wait a minute. I think I saw something similar to this! Searched for a bit and found it :) thanks for sharing it - found a few new books for my collection.


- Please make your buttons disabled after clicks while loading :( I couldn't realize at the beginning if I spend my credit or not.

- And, it still says "Generating...", I think HN guys broke the server :)

- Pricing: I cannot understand why these kind of services require monthly subscription, it look weird to subscribe a service that I use a few times in a year.

- Some examples could be nice before signing up.


Bro,thank you for your feedback. We'll work on making those improvements.


It crashed after my first try to enter a website. Seems it needs a few more years to be used.


Sent from NetSurf on OpenBSD. Seems to work well on this platform, or at least as well as something that does not support javascript can...


> at least as well as something that does not support javascript can

Not related to Netsurf (which I learned about yesterday while reading about Duktape — a HN coincidence), but recently I went back to using Firefox with JS off as default (using uBlock Origin in advanced user mode) and it's... surprisingly OK? I remember having more trouble in the past.

- Less websites are breaking. Maybe I now have better browsing habits and a better instinct for when a website needs special treatment?

- Enabling JS for an specific website feels easier than doing in same in pre-WebExtensions API NoScript ever felt.


I think one part of it is that HTML(5) and CSS have become much more powerful.

In the past, if you wanted fancy animations or even just moving parts on your webpage, you needed to script that.

Heck, you needed to embed Flash for any video or the like.

Nowadays, even responsive webpages are no problem with just HTML+CSS.


This response is from Chrome on Android, but I've been using NetSurf for many years on Linux and I've never had a crash so far as I remember.


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