I've documented and shared some code repos that I use to manage concurrent AI agents (Claude Code in my case).
I wrote this article because I often heard about people using git worktrees to work with multiple agents but I never saw someone document exactly how they do it and how they adopt them into their development workflow.
I came up with this workflow that I've been using for almost a year now and have been extremely productive, so I thought I'd share.
It wasn't the case for me, however I'm not exactly sure how they've implemented this DNS hijacking and if I was just an exception or the rule. Other people using custom DNS seemed to have a similar experience from what I read on reddit though.
Yeah that's my bad. I thought saying Utah ISP might highlight that this is currently only a Utah issue and CenturyLink isn't blocking everyone's traffic... I think.
If the title said just Centurylink instead of Utah, people would be complaining of click bait, so I think Utah was the better choice. Using "Centurylink (only in Utah)" or something similar would have been the most ideal from an accuracy POV.
I wrote this article because I often heard about people using git worktrees to work with multiple agents but I never saw someone document exactly how they do it and how they adopt them into their development workflow.
I came up with this workflow that I've been using for almost a year now and have been extremely productive, so I thought I'd share.