Let's make a simple community where each person has their own channel (or can form teams) and plays around on their own, since the maximum number of participants is around 50.
Key Points
- 1Park Chansung proposes a "vibe coding" community for up to 50 participants, where members work independently on their projects and share daily summaries of their progress.
- 2The community plans to utilize a Discord server with a custom backend and GLM API to automatically summarize daily activities, aiming to provide personalized updates based on member interests.
- 3The initiative offers GLM credits and access to a highly affordable GLM coding plan, with special community sections reserved for members who join through referrals.
This post by Park Chansung outlines a proposal for establishing a "vibe coding" community designed for approximately 50 participants. The core concept revolves around fostering individual or team-based coding environments, where members operate within their own dedicated channels (likely on Discord) with minimal direct group interaction.
The methodological innovation lies in a structured daily reporting and engagement system. A key component of this system is a custom server, acting as middleware, which interfaces with the Discord server. This server's primary function is to gather and aggregate daily activities from each participant's or team's channel. Once collected, the aggregated data is then processed using the GLM API. This API is leveraged for two main purposes:
- Summarization: To condense the detailed daily activities into concise summaries, enabling members to quickly grasp what others are working on.
- Engagement Generation: Beyond simple summarization, the system plans to initially broadcast these summaries widely. Subsequently, it aims to introduce a more personalized approach by generating "interest scores" based on individual members' past activities and preferences, as well as crafting "Eye Catch" phrases to highlight particularly relevant or interesting updates.
The distribution of these daily summaries and engagement prompts can occur either via email or within specific Discord channels. The proposed operational duration for this community is approximately six months. To support participants, the initiator plans to provide GLM Credit to individuals or teams as needed, leveraging a $2,000 credit pool accumulated from sign-ups. This credit is designated for covering operational costs and participant support.
The choice of GLM API is explicitly justified by its perceived advantages: strong performance coupled with a highly competitive price, especially during its current discount period. The post highlights that approximately $300 can provide extensive usage for a year, implying high accessibility and scalability for the project's needs. Furthermore, it anticipates that GLM models will continuously improve, with future models (e.g., equivalent to Claude Opus 4.5) becoming available within the existing plan.
While the community is open to everyone, a specialized access mechanism is detailed: certain categories or content within the community will only be visible to users whose IDs match those of individuals who joined through a specific referral link. This creates a curated experience for referrer-linked members.