Hex Horizon
113 posts

Hex Horizon
@Noderunner_Hex
software developer / innovation builder / venture contributor





this is f*cking dangerous someone just open sourced the entire "LOOP ENGINEERING" framework for free the guy who built Claude Code at Anthropic said it himself: "I don't prompt Claude anymore. I have loops running that prompt Claude. My job is to write loops. stop prompting your agent. build the thing that prompts it for you. discover → plan → execute → verify → repeat you used to be inside that loop loop engineering is you stepping out of it entirely the repo includes: - 6 production ready patterns (daily triage, CI sweeper, PR babysitter) - clone and run starters for Claude Code, Codex, and Grok - a loop readiness CLI that scores your codebase - SKILL. md templates, STATE.md spine, full safety docs use this one command to start(copy/paste): npx @cobusgreyling/loop-init • --pattern daily-triage -tool claude-code bookmark before this blows up repo link : github.com/cobusgreyling/…











Goldman Sachs Vice Chairman told students: "most of you won't succeed" - then gave them the exact 18 rules he used to become the person Fortune 500 CEOs call first "give your client advice that is against your own interest - that's the fastest way to earn trust - most bankers will never do this " Goldman Sachs MDs make $1-3 million a year - this is exactly how they do it - in 23 minutes for free "don't take no for an answer - from getting reservations at a restaurant to getting a billion-dollar client - never ever ever ever ever give up " he said 15-min a day reading the Wall Street Journal will make you smarter than 90% of Wall Street within 6 months - no one does it bookmark & watch today ↓

Google Flow now has access to Google Maps Street View. Activate the Agent Mode and prompt it to create an image based on an address in the US. Google Flow will recreate the image, and then you can decide how to animate it.








IN 2010 AN MIT LEGEND SHOWED THAT MOST OF MACHINE LEARNING IS JUST MEASURING HOW CLOSE TWO THINGS ARE 49 minutes from Patrick Winston, who taught MIT to think about thinking for decades. -> The idea that lands: a machine does not "Recognize" anything. It measures how close you are to examples it already has, and picks the nearest one. No understanding, no intuition. Just distance -- how far is this new thing from the stuff it has already seen. Winston builds the whole method from scratch on a chalkboard, and the magic quietly disappears. That simple trick is everywhere now -- face unlock, recommendations, search, the retrieval behind half the AI products you touch. Modern models turn everything into points in space and grab the nearest neighbor. This is that idea, before it scaled. Chasing the buzzwords was never the skill -- seeing the simple measurement underneath is. This is where you learn it. Most people think AI recognition is some black box. The ones who watch this know it is mostly a ruler. Bookmark it. This one's a legend. ↓