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Comments (173)

  • pavlov
    The comment that points out that this week-long experiment produced nothing more than a non-functional wrapper for Servo (an existing Rust browser) should be at the top:https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46649046
  • paulus_magnus2
    The blog[0] is worded rather conservatively but on Twitter [2] the claim is pretty obvious and the hype effect is achieved [2]CEO stated "We built a browser with GPT-5.2 in Cursor"instead of"by dividing agents into planners and workers we managed to get them busy for weeks creating thousands of commits to the main branch, resolving merge conflicts along the way. The repo is 1M+ lines of code but the code does not work (yet)"[0] https://cursor.com/blog/scaling-agents[1] https://x.com/kimmonismus/status/2011776630440558799[2] https://x.com/mntruell/status/2011562190286045552[3]https://www.reddit.com/r/singularity/comments/1qd541a/ceo_of...
  • embedding-shape
    I'm eager to find out if this was actually successfully compiled at one point (otherwise how did they get the screenshots?), so I'm running `cargo check` for each of the last 100 commits to see if anything works. Will update here with the results once it's ready.Edit: As mentioned, I ran `cargo check` on all the last 100 commits, and seems every single of them failed in some way: https://gist.github.com/embedding-shapes/f5d096dd10be44ff82b...
  • ankit219
    Like it or not, it's a fundraising strategy. They have followed it mutliple times (eg: vague posts about how much their inhouse model is writing code, online RL, and lines of code etc. earlier) and it was less vague before. They released a model and did not give us the exact benchmarks or even tell us the base model for the same. This is not to imply there is no substance behind it, but they are not as public about their findings as one would like them to be. Not a criticism, just an observation.
  • deng
    If you look at the original Cursor post, they say they are currently running similar experiments, for instance, this Excel clone:https://github.com/wilson-anysphere/formulaThe Actions overview is impressive: There have been 160,469 workflow runs, of which 247 succeeded. The reason the workflows are failing is because they have exceeded their spending limit. Of course, the agents couldn't care less.
  • Snuggly73
    The latest commit now builds and runs (at least on my Mac). It’s tragically broken and the code is…dunno…something. 3m lines of something.I couldn’t make it render the apple page that was on the Cursor promo. Maybe they’ve used some other build.
  • geooff_
    I think the original post was just headline bait. There is such a fast news cycle around AI that many people would take "Thousands of AI agents collaborate to make a web browser" at face value.
  • solid_fuel
    This is par for the course with this AI slop. Most of the big claims about LLM productivity have completely lacked any backing evidence. Big claims require big evidence, but all I've seen so far is loud assertions and pathetic results.
  • jadenpeterson
    For my 11th or 12th birthday, I got a pet porcupine and I was ecstatic. It was my first pet, and I spent hours researching what they eat, what habitats they like, etc. I carefully curated my room to accommodate him (him being 'Sonic'), even keeping it clean for the first time in forever so I wouldn't lose him amidst the mess of soiled undergarments and such. He loved it, and I loved him. Of course, it made no difference when my uncle sat on him on Christmas morning. We rushed him to the vet, but they told us his scans showed fractures on several vertebrae or something like that. We took him home, and waited for him to die, but the waiting was too painful. I'll spare the details, but what transpired next involved my dad, his shovel, and a lot of tears.About an hour later, we got a call from the vet - they'd misread the scan, and Sonic was gonna be fine. I think I was traumatized at the time, but the whole thing later became an inside joke (?) for my family - "Don't kill your porcupine before the vet calls" (a la "Don't count your chickens before they hatch").I guess my point, as it pertains to Cursor, its AI offerings, and other corporations in the space is that we shouldn't jump the gun before a reasonable framework exists to evaluate such open-ended technologies. Of course Cursor reported this as a success, the incentive structure demands they do so. So remember - don't kill your porcupine before the vet calls.
  • nindalf
    The CEO said> It's 3M+ lines of code across thousands of files. The rendering engine is from-scratch in Rust with HTML parsing, CSS cascade, layout, text shaping, paint, and a custom JS VM."From scratch" sounds very impressive. "custom JS VM" is as well. So let's take a look at the dependencies [1], where we find- html5ever- cssparser- rquickjsThat's just servo [2], a Rust based browser initially built by Mozilla (and now maintained by Igalia [3]) but with extra steps. So this supposed "from scratch" browser is just calling out to code written by humans. And after all that it doesn't even compile! It's just plain slop.[1] - https://github.com/wilsonzlin/fastrender/blob/main/Cargo.tom...[2] - https://github.com/servo/servo[3] - https://blogs.igalia.com/mrego/servo-2025-stats/
  • thedelanyo
    These are stories that solely exist just to sell shovels and would cause one uninformed CEO to layoff actual humans.
  • chaosprint
    I really doubt this marketing approach is effective. Isn't this just shooting themselves in the foot? My actual experience with Cursor has been: their design is excellent and the UX is great—it handles frontend work reasonably well. But as soon as you go deeper, it becomes very prone to serious bugs. While the addition of Claude's new models has helped somewhat, the results are still not as good as Google's Antigravity (despite its poor UX and numerous bugs). What's worse, even with this much-hyped Claude model, you can easily blow through the $20 subscription limit in just a few days. Maybe they're betting on models becoming 10x better and 10x cheaper, but that seems unlikely to happen anytime soon.
  • ares623
    Can’t help but draw parallels to how working with AI feels like. Your coworker opens a giant impressive looking PR and marks it ready for review. Meanwhile it’s up to someone else in the team to do the actual work of checking. Meanwhile the PR author gets patted on the back by management for being forward thinking and pro-active while everyone else is “nitpicky” and holding progress back.
  • anon
    undefined
  • heliumtera
    Making it compile will considerably decrease productivity. PR number go up
  • 7777777phil
    I wonder who they actually tried to impress with that? People who understand and appreciate the difficulty of building a browser from scratch would surely be interested to understand what you (or your Agent) did to a degree that they would understand if you didn’t.
  • josefritzishere
    Key phrase "They never actually claim this browser is working and functional " This is what most AI "successes" turn out to be when you apply even a modicum of scrutiny.
  • Pinus
    I haven’t studied the project that this is a comment on, but: The article notices that something that compiles, runs, and renders a trivial HTML page might be a good starting point, and I would certainly agree with that when it’s humans writing the code. But is it the only way? Instead of maintaining “builds and runs” as a constant and varying what it does, can it make sense to have “a decent-sized subset of browser functionality” as a constant and varying the “builds and runs” bit? (Admittedly, that bit does not seem to be converging here, but I’m curious in more general terms.)
  • Matthyze
    Out of curiosity, what is the most difficult thing about building a browser?
  • m00dy
    Cursor CEO got grilled in HN for a good reason.
  • ironbound
    Devin 2.0
  • mikojan
    Dear god please let AI get forever stuck at this point because it would be so funny
  • noosphr
    If this is what makes the AI bubble pop I'll laugh so hard.
  • emp17344
    This is why AI skeptics exist. We’re now at the point where you can make entirely unsubstantiated claims about AI capability, and even many folks on HN will accept it with a complete lack of discernment. The hype is out of control.
  • LegitShady
    AI hype is just lying until you get caught
  • lifetimerubyist
    > company claims they "built a browser" from scratch> looks inside> completely useless and busted30 billion dollar VS Code fork everyone. When we do start looking at these people for what they are: snake oil salesmen.They slop laundered the FOSS Servo code into a broken mess and called it a browser, but dumbasses with money will make line go up based on lies. EFF right off.
  • user432678
    Are you telling me AI bros lying about their products? No way that ever happened…
  • AIorNot
    Lesson 1:Always take any pronouncement from an AI company (heavily dependent on VC and public sentiment on AI) with a heavy grain of salt..hype over realityI’m building an AI startup myself and I know that world and its full of hypsters and hucksters unfortunately - also social media communication + low attention span + AI slop communication is a blight upon todays engineering culture
  • xcvxvdf
    [dead]
  • logicallee
    (this has been fixed)
  • jonathanstrange
    I think it's only a matter of time until this becomes reality. It's almost inevitable.My prediction last year was already that in the distant future - more than 10 years into the future - operating systems will create software on the fly. It will be a basic function of computers. However, there might remain a need for stable, deterministic software, the two human-machine interaction models can live together. There will be a need for software that does exactly what one wants in a dumb way and there will be a need for software that does complex things on the fly in an overall less reliable ad hoc way.
  • ryanisnan
    The amount of negativity in the original post was astounding.People were making all sorts of statements like: - “I cloned it and there were loads of compiler warnings” - “the commit build success rate was a joke” - “it used 3rd party libs” - “it is AI slop”What they all seem to be just glossing over is how the project unfolded: without human intervention, using computers, in an exceptionally accelerated time frame, working 24hr/day.If you are hung up on commit build quality, or code quality, you are completely missing the point, and I fear for your job prospects. These things will get better; they will get safer as the workflows get tuned; they will scale well beyond any of us.Don’t look at where the tech is. Look where it’s going.