Hey folks, today I want to quickly pay tribute to my dad, Matthew Tossell, who retires* today after 43 (!!!) years at his firm. That’s 40 years longer than I’ve ever worked anywhere - and Ben’s Bites is the only thing I’ve done for longer than 2 years 😯.

I learned a lot about hard work from him. Too much to put here - he transformed his law firm several times over 4 decades and most recently forced the company to adopt AI (I may have played a part here 😉).

I’ve saved the soppy shit for a letter I wrote him today - as he wrote me one when I sold my first company.

Happy retirement day, dad. I know you’re reading this - my biggest fan (the feelings mutual)

*retirement for him = started a new company, on the board of a university, school and Cardiff business council (plus whatever work I start giving him 😈)

Ok, AI stuff…

I’m becoming Codex-pilled… I’ve been using a terminal every day since realising it’s not scary any more, as it’s just talking to AI, but I forced myself to try the Codex app for tasks and I actually am starting to really really like it.

I still prefer being able to easily have multiple tabs next to one another but I like the Chat | Files (or browser) view a lot - something I never had with a terminal.

I built a dinosaur jumping game for Max and Arabella this morning. Set up a Gmail learning system to understand how to label + archive my emails (plus an automation for it). I’ve revamped my memory system and have been pilling in tons of bookmarks/youtube transcripts etc that I can reference any time.

I have a main folder ‘bites’ which has my general instructions for day-to day stuff:

So it speaks to me in a certain way, knows my memories, how I want it to behave etc. I have a running ‘todos’ thread that I work through each day - with a corresponding ‘TODOS.md’ file.

I desperately am waiting for a mobile version…

Working with agents is just files and access. I’m excited to keep trying this out for day-to-day and coding. But for ‘proper’ coding work I still use droid in the terminal.


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  • Cloudflare now lets agents create accounts, buy domains and deploy. An agent can provision a Cloudflare account, start a paid subscription, register a domain, get an API token and deploy without you doing dashboard/admin gymnastics. Humans still approve terms and permissions, but the setup maze is getting agent-readable. Lots of companies are moving this way, letting less-technical people like us just get stuff built without worrying about all the services in the middle.

  • Stripe announced 288 things at Sessions, relevant ones: Agentic Commerce Suite, Link's wallet for agents, streaming payments and agent-ready Treasury accounts. There is also a Link CLI that gives agents one-time-use payment credentials from your Link wallet, without exposing your real card details.

  • Cursor SDK - build agents using the same runtime, harness and models that power Cursor.

  • Warp is now open-source and OpenAI is the founding sponsor for the repo. Warp's bet is that contributors bring taste/direction/verification while agents do more of the implementation work.

  • Lightfield is an AI-native CRM that just shipped Skills. Define any workflow in plain English and trigger it with a sentence. The AI agent executes against your full data graph with code execution, web search, and file I/O. Try Lightfield (use code BENSBITESS23 for 3 months free)*



  • The most fun I’ve had building apps: GPT-5.5 + GPT-Image-2

  • Codex masterclass workshop from AI Engineer London, plus GPT-5.5 prompt guidance

  • Building Pi, and what makes self-modifying software so fascinating

  • Fred Wilson on 40 years in venture — and why USV is automating itself

  • Martin Fowler’s updated AI coding notes - verification, guardrails and the difference between vibe coding and agentic engineering.

  • Poolside’s first public models, Laguna M.1 and Laguna XS.2, are now on OpenRouter. Built for agentic coding and long-horizon work.

  • here.now now has private cloud storage for agents as well as instant web publishing. I synced all my local memory and files (2.5k files to this with one prompt - tweet is below)

  • Stripe emulator skill - offline, stateful Stripe emulation for checkout pages, webhooks and deterministic CI without secrets.

  • Sandcastle - Matt Pocock open-sourced his software factory.

  • Quick by Amazon connects to email, calendar, Slack and local files to flag important stuff, summarize information and automate tasks.

  • Some good posts on AI coding for senior engineers, harness engineering, why people hate AI, and yet, the race to adopt it.

  • OSSCAR - a quarterly index of the fastest-growing open-source orgs from Supabase and >commit.

  • Before GitHub - Armin Ronacher on how open-source collaboration worked before GitHub.

  • ElevenMusic - discover, remix, create and earn from music built on ElevenLabs’ music model.

  • OpenAI explained the goblins. OpenAI models have been increasingly mentioning creators in chats. They found out why, but GPT-5.5 was trained before the fix.

  • Andrej Karpathy at Sequoia AI Ascent on vibe coding vs agentic engineering. And also linking Demis’ talk from the event too.

  • Ghostty is leaving GitHub, with Mitchell Hashimoto writing up why.


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