Moonshot AI’s Kimi K2 is now enriched with an agent mode called “OK Computer”:

So what can it create?

  • multi-page websites
  • mobile first designs
  • editable slides
  • interactive dashboards

But Kimi already had Kimi Slides: “Text to slides, in minutes.” Whatever.

What seems to be the target of such a tool? Sales and marketing? Finance? Not real software developers!

South China Morning Post: Moonshot AI’s Kimi assistant offers ‘agent mode’ for creating multi-page websites, slides: “The feature is available on Kimi’s official website for international users but remains in beta testing for users in mainland China.” Wow.

🤖

While being aware that “OK Computer” is no Kiro replacement, I wanted to give it a try, but I didn’t have any idea, so I attempted to ask it to debug what Kiro created for me:

Ludditus: Can I feed you an entire PyQt project, to fix it? It has been generated by Kiro.

🤖 Kimi “OK Computer”: I can help you fix your PyQt project! However, I should clarify that I’m optimized for creating visually appealing websites and web applications rather than desktop applications with PyQt.

That said, I can still help you analyze and fix PyQt code. Let me read your project files to understand what needs to be fixed.
Could you please upload your PyQt project files? I can:

  1. Analyze the code structure and identify issues
  2. Fix bugs and improve the code
  3. Restructure the project if needed
  4. Add missing functionality
  5. Improve the UI/UX design

Once you upload the files, I’ll examine them and provide a comprehensive fix. I’ll also create a todo list to track the improvements needed.

If you’re looking for a web-based alternative to your PyQt application, I could also help you convert it to a modern web application with enhanced visuals and interactivity – but let’s first see what you have and fix the existing PyQt project as requested.

Please upload your project files and I’ll get started!

Ludditus: Can I upload a ZIP? Or how could I upload its folder structure?

🤖 Kimi “OK Computer”: You can upload a ZIP file directly! The system will automatically extract it and preserve the folder structure. This is actually the easiest way to upload an entire PyQt project with multiple files and directories.

Just upload your ZIP file and I’ll be able to:

  1. Extract and examine the complete project structure
  2. Analyze all Python files and dependencies
  3. Identify issues across the entire codebase
  4. Fix problems while maintaining the project organization
  5. Test the fixes to ensure everything works

Once you upload the ZIP, I’ll start by reading the project structure and creating a todo list of what needs to be fixed. Then I’ll work through each issue systematically.

Go ahead and upload your PyQt project ZIP file!

Ludditus: The web interface doesn’t let me upload a ZIP: Parsing failed.

🤖 Kimi “OK Computer”: I understand the web interface doesn’t support ZIP uploads. Let me help you upload the project files individually. Here are a few approaches:

Option 1: Upload key files first
Start by uploading the main Python files (like main.py, app.py, or whatever your entry point is) and any critical modules. I can begin analyzing and fixing those while you upload the rest.

Option 2: Upload the complete folder structure
You can upload files one by one, maintaining the directory structure. Just tell me the folder organization as you upload files.

Option 3: Copy-paste approach
If the files aren’t too large, you could copy and paste the code directly into our conversation.

Let’s start with your main application file – could you upload or paste the primary Python file that runs your PyQt application? Once I see the main structure, I can guide you on what other files would be most helpful to upload next.

What’s the name of your main PyQt application file?

Ludditus: You cannot access a GitHub repository, can you?

🤖 Kimi “OK Computer”: Quota exceeded.

FFS! Even if I had asked it directly to create a simple website, it wouldn’t have been able to do it before this ridiculously small quota expired!

🤖

What they want to do is to make people say, “Here, take my money!”

Not going to happen.

🤖

Kimi K2 already started to piss me off even before this ridiculous “OK Computer.”

Back when I was using DeepSeek much more frequently than today, it once told me that I was making up things and what I said was true in my alternate reality”! It simply refused to accept a simple fact. (I don’t remember whether the Internet search worked back then or not.) I took offense at DeepSeek.

Now, just before “OK Computer” was released, Kimi K2 told me that “macOS 26 Tahoe was released within the alternate-timeline premise of that Wikipedia page”! I had to ask it very strongly 🙂 to find web pages that prove it’s been released on September 15. It eventually conceded that this happened, but never apologized. Before that, it repeatedly insisted that I was wrong and that several articles I quoted were “still wrong.”

I suppose my use of Copilot and ChatGPT is going to increase more and more. What’s the purpose of having 12* chatbots at hand if most of them keep disappointing, and the Chinese are unbelievably rude?
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*ChatGPT, Copilot, Claude, Gemini, Grok, Mistral, DeepSeek, Qwen, Kimi, Z.ai, Perplexity, Lumo