Finally, Attie can register all AT protocol programs.
The latest app from the team behind Bluesky is Atty, an AI assistant that lets you build your own algorithms.At the Atmosphere conference, former Bluesky CEO Jay Graber and CTO Paul Frazee unveiled Atty, which is built on top of Bluesky's base AT protocol (Atproto).
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Eventually, Attie will be able to code entire applications for the AT protocol.
Eventually, Attie will be able to vibrate entire applications for the AT protocol.
Attie allows users to create custom feeds using natural language.For example, you can ask for "texts about myths, legends and traditional music, especially Celtic culture".Launching these feeds is limited to the standalone Attie app.But the plan is to make them available in Bluesky and other atproto apps.
But this is just the beginning.Users will eventually be able to use Attie to code their own applications on Proto.In a blog post, Gerber said:
We built the AT protocol so that anyone can build any application they can imagine on top of it, but until recently "anyone" really meant "anyone who can code."Agent coding tools change that.For the first time, an open protocol can truly be open to anyone.It has become increasingly possible to customize software without coding experience.Atmosphere is an open data set with a clearly defined application schema.layer, making it uniquely suited to the production of encoding agents.
For now, Attie is in closed beta, but you can join the waiting list by visiting attie.ai.
