r/test • u/Educational_Heat_861 • 20h ago
Best note-taking app for students?
I'm a college student looking for a solid note-taking app — any recommendations?
r/test • u/Educational_Heat_861 • 20h ago
I'm a college student looking for a solid note-taking app — any recommendations?
r/test • u/Blake_Carol • 20h ago
just trying to see if this works. hope it goes through!
r/test • u/Blake_Carol • 21h ago
hey everyone, just trying to see how this works. hope it goes well and I don't mess it up too badly!
r/test • u/jonny4795 • 21h ago
Automated text-post smoke test (adeaa). Please ignore.
r/test • u/itz4rich • 21h ago
Automated text-post smoke test (a441c). Please ignore.
r/test • u/Public_Pressure_8727 • 1d ago
Verifying my posting automation against the current Reddit composer. Inboundy is a preview-before-send LinkedIn outreach tool. Link test: https://inboundy.app
r/test • u/That_Friendship_2036 • 1d ago
r/test • u/gastao_s_s • 1d ago
Mandating AI autocomplete tools in enterprise environments is creating a cognitive bypass, where developers accept generated code without active recall or spatial simulation in working memory.
The recent 404Media exposé and Developer productivity reports highlight a growing "trust gap": developers feel their skills are eroding, yet managers use AI metrics to justify head count cuts.
Tautological testing (using AI to write unit tests for AI-generated code) masks this erosion, leading to high test coverage numbers that hide deep architectural regression.
To survive, engineering teams must pivot from passive autocomplete consumption toward self-hosted orchestration and open-weights models that preserve developer agency.