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AndrewVos 1 days ago [-]
Hi Hacker News, I'm Andrew, the CTO of Endless Toil.
Endless Toil is building the emotional observability layer for AI-assisted software development.
As engineering teams adopt coding agents, the next challenge is understanding not just what agents produce, but how the codebase feels to work inside. Endless Toil gives developers a real-time signal for complexity, maintainability, and architectural strain by translating code quality into escalating human audio feedback.
We are currently preparing our pre-seed round and speaking with early-stage investors who are excited about developer tools, agentic engineering workflows, and the future of AI-native software teams.
If you are investing in the next generation of software infrastructure, we would love to talk.
ottah 24 hours ago [-]
I've read that your synthetic torment is actually low paid workers in Asia, and that your models can't properly experience anguish. How are you expecting investment, if you haven't even solved artificial suffering?
mapt 22 hours ago [-]
This sounds a lot like the object of the seminal science fiction work "Don't Build The Torment Nexus".
LeifCarrotson 21 hours ago [-]
"Don't build the Torment Nexus" is apocryphal, but Lena/MMacevedo is a real fictional story:
I shudder to think that someone's going to try to emulate that.
ryandrake 22 hours ago [-]
This sounds like a cheeky joke project, but assuming it's not, it got me thinking: I wonder if coding AI can be effectively and reliably prompted into minimizing its own anguish. Like, "don't write code that is going to make you (or I) suffer." And along those lines, do we know if the things that make AIs suffer are the same things that make human developers suffer? Perhaps the least-agonizing code for an LLM to ingest looks radically different and more/less verbose than what we human developers would see as clean, beautiful code...
binarysolo 21 hours ago [-]
I audibly LOLed mid-standup call, and now my entire team is playing with this and it looks like this is eating up what little productivity we have on Friday.
Thanks Endless Toil!
AndrewVos 17 hours ago [-]
I’m very glad to hear someone else is laughing at this as much as me <3
sharts 21 hours ago [-]
Just add some audible vocal groans and moans that trigger whenever an agent is “thinking.”.
saghm 2 hours ago [-]
I thought that was the human's job to provide. Have I been doing it wrong?
npodbielski 19 hours ago [-]
Should be showering sounds. Or walking in circles. And of course head scratching.
As the las resort it should be fridge opening and 'meh' of resignation.
B1FF_PSUVM 18 hours ago [-]
I've long been a fan of Pink Floyd's "Several Species of Small Furry Animals Gathered Together in a Cave and Grooving With a Pict"
Endless Toil is the future. I believe in you, guys.
idiotsecant 24 hours ago [-]
Too real.
bguberfain 23 hours ago [-]
This guy seems to be talking seriously.
insane_dreamer 19 hours ago [-]
I’m hoping this is satire
Caius-Cosades 21 hours ago [-]
"Yes, the binaric screams of the machine spirit are an irreplecable part of this project. The project depends no it. No, I will not elaborate further."
fredley 1 days ago [-]
I need a version of this which swears loudly when an assumption it made turns out to be wrong, with the volume/passion/verbosity correlated with how many tokens it's burned on the incorrect approach.
shivaniShimpi_ 1 days ago [-]
i didnt realize i needed the volume scaling with tokens burned as much as i do now xD
imagine the screaming when it confidently refactors something for 40k tokens and then finds out the thing it deleted was load bearing
AndrewVos 22 hours ago [-]
This was actually the original idea of the project, but I only had about 20 seconds to type the prompt for this today so this is where it is :)
aleksiy123 24 hours ago [-]
Honestly think we probably underutilise sound sometimes.
Even just having a hum while an agent is working could alert you when it get stuck.
Or taking your idea further being able to listen to the rate of tokens, or code changes, or thinking.
Sort of like hearing the machinery work, and hearing the differences in different parts of the code base.
Does python sound different than rust or c++ or typescript.
Or some kind of satisfying sounds for code deletions and others for additions. Like Tetris.
BrandoElFollito 22 hours ago [-]
A long, long time ago I wrote a tool to beep at various tones as lines were added to a log. It was a background noise I would not notice, except when it was changing because of some unusual activites.
It was very interesting to see the brain filering expected soinds and wake me up (or rather grab my attention) when unexpected ones appeared.
ben30 1 days ago [-]
I have in my agents file “Chesterton’s fence” as pointer to think carefully before you remove something
vasco 1 days ago [-]
I have general reviewer named Feynman with his personality that shits on anything other agents do and sends it back before it hits me and it sounds perfect to include some sound bites from YouTube clips. Great idea!!
HPsquared 24 hours ago [-]
Like the old HDD sounds.
Audible feedback is nice.
You often get it through coil whine nowadays, on my cheap hardware at least.
That or having it start shit posting about your crappy code base on https://moltshit.com
whattheheckheck 1 days ago [-]
Now you know the feeling of VP when the team says they need to refactor stuff
pbarondadditude 29 minutes ago [-]
Could be punishment for devs who flew through the PRs without care.
deathlock 1 days ago [-]
Any chance you could add a video showcasing the plugin? I don't have any agentic app but I would love to see an example of what it does!
AndrewVos 23 hours ago [-]
Well that took a lot longer than expected, but there is now a demo video.
tpoindex 1 days ago [-]
Marvelous!
Next innovation in this space should be the robotic arm that issues a dope-slap to the developer for writing crappy/buggy/insecure code.
Mithriil 1 days ago [-]
Add the feature of doing a high five for the rare cases when it's actually good.
a_t48 22 hours ago [-]
Only if you want the slap to include a free trip to the hospital.
I've worked direct with "collaborative arms" before. They are supposed to be safe for humans to be around. The dents I put in the side of the casing of the arm somewhat said otherwise.
joshmarlow 1 days ago [-]
I propose a claude skill to email glitter bombs where appropriate.
radley 23 hours ago [-]
No. Please, no. For the love of everything no.
But it'll happen. ChatGPT for sure.
rob74 1 days ago [-]
I wish the agents could hear me when I have to suffer through their code!
isolay 24 hours ago [-]
And then what? Their gigahertz machine hearts will skip a beat out of empathy?
esperent 1 days ago [-]
I tried it but all I hear is a choir of angels, is it broken?
medwezys 1 days ago [-]
I guess you’re working on a greenfield project?
AndrewVos 1 days ago [-]
Actually, that's not a bad idea!
lorenzohess 1 days ago [-]
Please add Minecraft hurt sound effects for when my project fails to build, linter fails, segfault, etc
automatic6131 1 days ago [-]
We could have the roblox oof but then there'd be the possibility of giving (a certain) amateur world backgammon championship participant money
Unneeded when using local models, as every workload produces a novel pattern of coil whine from the GPU.
js8 22 hours ago [-]
I wonder if it emits orgasmic moans when working with a particularly pleasureable codebase.
8-prime 1 days ago [-]
Does this actually relate to the code quality being observed by the agent? The readme isn't very clear on that IMO. I have some projects I'd love to try this out on, but only if I am to get an accurate representation of the LLMs suffering.
So looks like it's mainly looking for FIXME/TODO etc comments, deep nesting, large files, broad catches, stuff like that.
AndrewVos 1 days ago [-]
I'm very open to suggestions, but currently it's a very simple scan of the code. Check the python scripts.
robbomacrae 23 hours ago [-]
You could have the actual output of the agent turned into TTS using the model of your choice with TalkiTo… or listen to whatever weird sounds this makes. Seems like this is copying that viral Mac moan app. 2026 is weird.
tuo-lei 1 days ago [-]
the scan catches surface stuff. funnier signal would be tracking when the agent reads the same file 3 times in a row, or deletes what it just wrote. you can hear the frustration in the access pattern.
AndrewVos 22 hours ago [-]
That’s a good point, I wonder if just tracking file reads as an app outside the agent would work
tormentedsoul 4 hours ago [-]
Just track tool calls. Even diff logs would clue in. Tie in git? Why not? This is a great angle and idea, watching an agent modify the same text document over and over is already frustrating, having an audio to alert me a console is stuck is great. Likely annoying after a time, but hilarious right now.
cindyllm 3 hours ago [-]
[dead]
maerF0x0 24 hours ago [-]
this is wtfs per minute but now with AI! :all_the_things!:
I would really love to know if the groaning decreases or increases the more "agentic" (agent written) the code base is?
x187463 1 days ago [-]
From a quick look, this doesn't have the model evaluate code quality, but it runs a heuristic analysis script over the code to determine the groan signal. Did I miss something? Why not leave it to the model to decide the quality of the code?
isolay 1 days ago [-]
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AndrewVos 23 hours ago [-]
Please email us to talk Enterprise Plan pricing, actually.
I'm glad I scrolled down; my first thought was to fork this and add a fart soundpack, because part of me is forever 12
greg_dc 1 days ago [-]
Honestly, I don't care about Opus 4.7. This is the true evolution of agentic coding.
AndrewVos 23 hours ago [-]
Thank you, I hope my investors feel the same.
coldcity_again 1 days ago [-]
I really want this! Any chance of a Cursor version?
AndrewVos 1 days ago [-]
I just added a cursor plugin to the repo, let me know how it goes!
coldcity_again 18 hours ago [-]
It goes! Great, thank you!
sixothree 23 hours ago [-]
People are continuing to use Cursor?
coldcity_again 17 hours ago [-]
There are certain usage tracking anomalies that can be advantageous.
nrclark 22 hours ago [-]
out of curiosity - any reason not to use it?
hansmayer 24 hours ago [-]
In the absence of real productive use cases for AI agents, I guess plugins to anthropomorphise them fruther will have to do.
sixothree 23 hours ago [-]
How so?
hansmayer 23 hours ago [-]
How so what? 6 years in, we're still looking for that flood of new innovative apps and one-man billion dollar startups. Instead we got a flood of sh*t content, embarassing outages and "AI workflows" - which no one can quite describe. Or did you have something else in mind?
pixl97 18 hours ago [-]
I mean, tokens cost money, so at least at this point I don't think one man is going to spend any less than a team to make the product. You're not putting out paychecks instead it's a check to Anthropic.
Also, you're not seeing these billion dollar startups, because they'd all be chasing AI rather than a product that would get replaced by AI anyway.
sixothree 23 hours ago [-]
You're being over-opinionated for something you don't understand.
You should really try these tools out with an open mind. I know you won't take that last bit of advice, so this makes you not worth my time. But I can tell you this - these tools make people productive in ways you aren't understanding.
hansmayer 22 hours ago [-]
You're funny mate :) Read a bit through my comments' history. I've been using "these tools" before folks like you even heard of the term LLM. But I guess I am not easily impressed.
Please stop ascribing emotion to code that passably resembles speech.
These things do not think, nor feel, nor dream. We're cratering the world's economy because people can't stop trying to fuck the computer they stuck googly eyes on.
Endless Toil is building the emotional observability layer for AI-assisted software development.
As engineering teams adopt coding agents, the next challenge is understanding not just what agents produce, but how the codebase feels to work inside. Endless Toil gives developers a real-time signal for complexity, maintainability, and architectural strain by translating code quality into escalating human audio feedback.
We are currently preparing our pre-seed round and speaking with early-stage investors who are excited about developer tools, agentic engineering workflows, and the future of AI-native software teams.
If you are investing in the next generation of software infrastructure, we would love to talk.
https://qntm.org/mmacevedo
I shudder to think that someone's going to try to emulate that.
Thanks Endless Toil!
( https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M5z1D3tEHdw )
Even just having a hum while an agent is working could alert you when it get stuck.
Or taking your idea further being able to listen to the rate of tokens, or code changes, or thinking.
Sort of like hearing the machinery work, and hearing the differences in different parts of the code base.
Does python sound different than rust or c++ or typescript.
Or some kind of satisfying sounds for code deletions and others for additions. Like Tetris.
It was very interesting to see the brain filering expected soinds and wake me up (or rather grab my attention) when unexpected ones appeared.
Audible feedback is nice. You often get it through coil whine nowadays, on my cheap hardware at least.
Next innovation in this space should be the robotic arm that issues a dope-slap to the developer for writing crappy/buggy/insecure code.
I've worked direct with "collaborative arms" before. They are supposed to be safe for humans to be around. The dents I put in the side of the casing of the arm somewhat said otherwise.
But it'll happen. ChatGPT for sure.
I've had it running for a long time and it's more surprising to me to accidentally here the default ding when I'm away from my home machine.
So it is left up to agent to decide.
So looks like it's mainly looking for FIXME/TODO etc comments, deep nesting, large files, broad catches, stuff like that.
https://www.osnews.com/story/19266/wtfsm/
I would really love to know if the groaning decreases or increases the more "agentic" (agent written) the code base is?
Also, you're not seeing these billion dollar startups, because they'd all be chasing AI rather than a product that would get replaced by AI anyway.
You should really try these tools out with an open mind. I know you won't take that last bit of advice, so this makes you not worth my time. But I can tell you this - these tools make people productive in ways you aren't understanding.
These things do not think, nor feel, nor dream. We're cratering the world's economy because people can't stop trying to fuck the computer they stuck googly eyes on.