Plutonic Rainbows

OpenAI Codex

I have switched over to Codex — it’s much cheaper, and for now it seems far more reliable. I’m not running into the problems that have plagued Claude Code over the past month.

I have managed to get Github integration, with Codex loading the appropriate model and permissions. It is an awful lot cheaper than Claude Code. I will probably use Gemini CLI for planning and stick with Codex for a few weeks.

Claude Code Fixed

This is what developers are essentially being told right now. After nearly a month of frankly appalling performance, Anthropic claims to have identified and resolved the issues. Yet the wording of their statement is so vague and non-specific that it offers little reassurance. It doesn’t explain what went wrong, what was actually fixed, or how developers can expect things to improve going forward. Instead, it leaves us with a cloud of ambiguity — an opaque message that feels more like damage control than genuine clarity.

Gail Elliott

Flux.1 [Dev]

Guardrails

I implemented a balanced guardrail system for the Claude Prompt Builder's adaptive complexity engine to address the verbosity concerns while maintaining essential safety checks. The changes have included some important modifying of the adaptive_prompt_builder.py to scale guardrails appropriately: simple tasks (≤800 chars) now receive concise core integrity principles and minimal quality assurance focused on testing, medium tasks (800-2000 chars) get balanced guidance with a condensed runtime priority wrapper and standard QA including lint/typecheck requirements, and complex tasks (2000+ chars) retain comprehensive orchestration with full guardrails. Key improvements involved creating three tiers of core integrity (minimal/balanced/full), implementing scaled quality assurance sections (minimal/standard/comprehensive), adding a concise runtime wrapper for medium complexity, and adjusting verbosity targets to realistic levels.

The system now ensures that even simple fix typo requests include essential testing reminders without overwhelming users with unnecessary orchestration details, while complex multi-domain tasks still receive the comprehensive guidance they require. Testing confirmed that simple tasks reduced from 2000 to 700 characters while preserving critical safety checks, achieving the goal of appropriate scaling without compromising quality control standards.

Adaptive System

I implemented an adaptive complexity system for the Claude Prompt Builder that addresses a critical issue where specialist agents weren't being effectively called for appropriate tasks. The system automatically analyzes user input to classify tasks as simple, medium, or complex, then generates appropriately scaled prompts — from concise 400-character responses for basic requests to comprehensive 2,500+ character structures for complex system design tasks. The core innovation was fixing the restrictive agent delegation logic that was preventing domain experts like security-engineer, python-engineer, and qa-engineer from being recommended when needed.

The implementation required building several new components including the file adaptive_prompt_builder.py (700+ lines), comprehensive configuration management, new API endpoints, and extensive testing frameworks. I maintained full backward compatibility while adding intelligent features like contextual agent triggers, fallback mechanisms, and configurable complexity thresholds. The system now successfully recommends 2+ relevant agents for medium complexity tasks and 5+ specialists with full orchestration for complex projects. Testing showed 100% accuracy in complexity detection and proper agent coordination across all scenarios, restoring the application's effectiveness in guiding users toward appropriate specialist assistance.