Adrian from avohq.io 

@adrian@ruby.social
238 Followers
117 Following
507 Posts
Product-minded engineer.
Building dev tools like Avo admin for Ruby on Rails
Twitteradrianthedev
Websitehttps://adrianthedev.com
Avo Admin for Railshttps://avohq.io

LLMs are getting better at understanding websites in real-time, but large context windows can cause them to miss key info among irrelevant content. The llms.txt file solves this by providing a compressed, LLM-friendly Markdown version of your site's important content.

https://avohq.io/blog/llms-txt-rails

For those debugging JS assets, toggle the "Hide extension URLs" filter in the Network tab.
It will dramatically cleanup the asset list 🤯
Sometimes the best conversations happen when you embrace being the person who doesn't quite feel like they belong yet.
Check out the lineup on the RailsConf website
https://railsconf.org/hack-spaces/#:~:text=Avo,Ruby%20on%20Rails
Hack Spaces

RailsConf 2025 is the world’s largest gathering of Rails developers, brought together to further discussion and learning about building, managing, and testing Rails applications. With a specific focus on Rails, conference topics can range from new users to administration to advanced techniques.

RailsConf 2025 Philadelphia, PA  July 8 - July 10
If you're at RailsConf in Philly this July and see someone who looks slightly overwhelmed by it all, that's probably me. Come say hi anyway.
When people get me talking about code, community, and building SaaS products, I can go for hours. That's my zone. That's where the imposter syndrome melts away because I'm just sharing what I genuinely care about.
But here's the thing about imposter syndrome in our industry: everyone feels it sometimes. Even the people you look up to probably felt the same way at some point.
I'm looking at the other maintainers and seeing Marco Roth, Rosa from Solid Queue, Steven, Jose Valim with Hotwire Combo Box, Chris Oliver. These are the Rails stars. And then there's me.
I'm excited to connect with people who are building things, solving problems, and pushing Rails forward. Not because I belong in some exclusive club, but because we're all just developers trying to build better software.
I'm heading to the last RailsConf's Hack Spaces and honestly, I have massive imposter syndrome.