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Felix Rieseberg
Engineering Manager at Notion |🫸 🫷Gives high-fives for JavaScript stunts
Felix Rieseberg is an accomplished Engineering Manager known for his work at companies like Notion, Stripe, Slack, and Microsoft.
With a background in MSc in Social Science of the Internet from the University of Oxford and a BA in German Literature, Poetry, and Linguistics from the University of Düsseldorf, Felix brings a diverse skill set to his roles.
His extensive experience includes positions such as Engineering Manager at Notion, Maintainer at ElectronJS, Engineering Manager at Stripe, and Staff Engineer at Stripe, among others.
Felix is also recognized for his contributions as an O'Reilly Author and Trainer and as a maintainer of numerous Node.js and JavaScript modules, notably in Electron development.
His professional journey has seen him take on roles ranging from Developer Evangelist to Research Associate and Executive Editor, showcasing his versatility and expertise across a wide spectrum of technical and managerial domains.
Highlights
Claude Code doesn't just resonate with developers anymore. Non-technical people are using it to build things. Technical people are using it for non-technical work. The line is blurring.
I'm by far not the first to think about this. Multiple teams at Anthropic have been working on "agentic experiences" for months - Claude not just as a chat partner, but as something that helps you do real work. @bcherny nudged me: can we take what we've built internally and ship an early, scoped-down version in a few days? So we took a small team, set an aggressive deadline ("Monday sound good?"), and got to work.
@claudeai wrote Cowork. Us humans meet in-person to discuss foundational architectural and product decisions, but all of us devs manage anywhere between 3 to 8 Claude instances implementing features, fixing bugs, or researching potential solutions.
For native code, we use local Git worktrees on our local machines. For smaller or web-code only changes, we just tell Claude to go implement it. When someone reports a bug in Slack, we often just @-mention Claude and tell it to fix it. A human (and another Claude) reviews all code before it's merged, but we're now spending most of our time orchestrating a fleet of Claudes and making decisions than artisanally writing individual lines of code.
We're releasing Cowork early. It has rough edges. But figuring out what to build is increasingly the hardest part of software engineering - and we think getting feedback early and hearing what users actually need is how we build something truly good.
👋 Hi, I'm Felix and I work on Claude Cowork, bringing Claude Code closer to all kinds of knowledge work. It's an early and rough preview, please tag me in any feedback - we want to iterate very quickly and make it a little better every day.