What is Gas Town

Gas Town

Gas Town is an interesting endeavor by Steve Yegge. Steve has long been warning that the IDE as we know it will be obsolete and replaced by AI Coding Agent Orchestrators. Gas Town is the result of several iterations into a workable orchestrator.

It is an extremely complicated workflow with a comprehensive article to help explain. Here are some highlights:

The focus is throughput: creation and correction at the speed of thought.

Gas Town workers are regular coding agents, each prompted to play one of seven well-defined worker roles.

The most fundamental workflow in Gas Town is the handoff, gt handoff, or the /handoff command, or just say, “let’s hand off”.

Just remember the Golden Rules:

  • Do not use Gas Town if you do not juggle at least five Claude Codes at once, daily.
  • Do not use Gas Town if you care about money.
  • Do not use Gas Town if you are more than 4 feet tall. I want to tower impressively at meet-ups, like Sauron.
  • Do not use Gas Town.
Checking Out exe.dev
exe.dev homepage

Finally took a look at David Crawshaw’s new project exe.dev , a slick new service for spinning up virtual machines in seconds. It’s a subscription service that gives you access to VM’s with persistant disks for a really great price. Enough is enough and I am slowly iterating through creating my own end to end agent orchestration system where I can manage projects as a HOTL (Human on the loop; shoutout Geoffrey Huntley ).

Why it’s perfect for coding agents

What really blows me away is how perfect it is for coding agents. I set up an environment in minutes, and it worked flawlessly:

  • Secure sandboxing – lets agents run wild without risking your main machine
  • Built-in agent support – they provide an agent called Shelley but I’m using Amp right now
  • Instant HTTPS proxies – share web apps immediately
  • Private-by-default sharing – keep your work secure