Dan Greller
2.7K posts

Dan Greller
@dgreller
Tech optimist inspired by psychology, economics and history. Liberty, Stoicism, epistemic humility, civil discourse, innovation, automation, #AI





Today, we’re releasing a feature that allows Claude to control your computer: Mouse, keyboard, and screen, giving it the ability to use any app. I believe this is especially useful if used with Dispatch, which allows you to remotely control Claude on your computer while you’re away.


Today, we’re releasing a feature that allows Claude to control your computer: Mouse, keyboard, and screen, giving it the ability to use any app. I believe this is especially useful if used with Dispatch, which allows you to remotely control Claude on your computer while you’re away.

The real reason AI is failing inside companies? Let’s say it. A company decides to go all-in on AI. The CEO announces the vision. The CTO aligns. The CIO gets the budget. Then the real transformation begins. Chief AI Officer. AI Center of Excellence. AI Ethics. AI Governance. AI Steering Committee. AI Committee for the AI Committee. Soon, you have 12 people managing AI. And one person using it. The intern. The only one actually shipping anything. Everyone else is busy… aligning on the prompt. AI doesn’t fail because of the technology. It fails because we turned it into a meeting. So here’s a thought: Are you building with AI… or scheduling it? #ArtificialIntelligence #AITransformation #Leadership #FutureOfWork #Innovation










Got some feedback as I've been working on this session. Going to postpone it for one week. No live session this Friday. The time will be 10am PT to help more folks attend. And I'll do this one next Friday. In the mean time, stay tuned for some nuggets...













Altman admitted that transformer models have hit the wall. Most improvements in the last 9 months are attributable more to the tooling around the model rather than the models themselves. In other words, this technology is rapidly maturing with no signs of another leap.


We've been building an internal Claude Code plugin system at Intercom with 13 plugins, 100+ skills, and hooks that turn Claude into a full-stack engineering platform. Lots done, more to do. Here's a thread of some highlights.


I know Silicon Valley startups don't want to hear this..... But the combination of someone in the trades with deep domain expertise and Claude Code will run circles around your generic software. I talked to Cory LaChance this morning, a mechanical engineer in industrial piping construction in Houston. He normally works with chemical plants and refineries, but now he also works with the terminal He reached out in a DM a few days ago and I was so fired up by his story, I asked him if we could record the conversation and share it. He built a full application that industrial contractors are using every day. It reads piping isometric drawings and automatically extracts every weld count, every material spec, every commodity code. Work that took 10 minutes per drawing now takes 60 seconds. It can do 100 drawings in five minutes, saving days of time. His co-workers are all mind blown, and when he talks to them, it's like they are speaking different languages. His fabrication shop uses it daily, and he built the entire thing in 8 weeks. During those 8 weeks he also had to learn everything about Claude Code, the terminal, VS Code, everything. My favorite quote from him was when he said, "I literally did this with zero outside help other than the AI. My favorite tools are screenshots, step by step instructions and asking Claude to explain things like I'm five." Every trades worker with deep expertise and a willingness to sit down with Claude Code for a few weekends is now a potential software founder. I can't wait to meet more people like Cory.



