WunderCorp, Inc.

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WunderCorp, Inc.

WunderCorp, Inc.

@wundercorp

The Agentic IDE Company. Local + cloud AI and agents. Private, secure, and containerized ⚜️

Station F, Paris, FR Inscrit le Mayıs 2021
778 Abonnements1.4K Abonnés
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WunderCorp, Inc.
WunderCorp, Inc.@wundercorp·
Can you believe BuilderStudio made this? Pathway used: Orbis A four-section landing page with a dark space theme, space video sections, liquid glass cards, Anton + Condiment typography, and a neon accent system. Skills used: • Frontend Design • Cinematic UI • WebGL / React Three Fiber Motion • Contrast Guard • Accessibility • Wiring • Doctor Recommended model: GPT-5.3 Codex
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WunderCorp, Inc. retweeté
OpenRouter
OpenRouter@OpenRouter·
Introducing the Fusion API, the smartest compound model in the market. Fusion achieves Fable-level intelligence at half the price. How it works 👇
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Harry Stebbings
Harry Stebbings@HarryStebbings·
Call me grumpy or jaded but I really only want to work with founders where what they are working on is their life mission.
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dany
dany@danywander·
one-person billion-dollar company
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WunderCorp, Inc.
WunderCorp, Inc.@wundercorp·
@StartupArchive_ If Marc ever wants to know about building web applications to microscopic detail I’d love to talk about it with him sometime. The agents we have are just a plus, depth comes first
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Startup Archive
Startup Archive@StartupArchive_·
Marc Andreessen explains how to identify fake founders “There are definitely people that come in [to pitch us] and present themselves to be something they’re not. They’ve read all the books. They will have listened to this interview. They study everything and they construct a facade…. And the amount of this is exactly correlated with the NASDAQ.” As Marc explains, when stock prices are high and tech is hot, there are a lot people who decide being a tech founder is a fast track to high status: “They’re fundamentally oriented for social status — they’re trying to get the social status without the substance. And there are always other places to go to get social status. So after 2000, the joke was B2B meant back to banking and B2C meant back to consulting — which is, the people who showed up to be in tech were like, yeah, screw it. This is over. I’m going to go back to Goldman Sachs or McKinsey where I can be high status. So you get this flushing kind of effect that happens in a downturn. But in a big upswing, you get a lot of people showing up with, let’s say, public persona without the substance to back it up.” How does Marc identify these people? He uses the same technique that homicide detectives use to find out if you’re innocent — keep asking increasingly detailed questions: “You ask increasingly detailed questions and people have trouble making things up and things just fuzz into obvious BS, and fake founders basically have the same problem. They’re able to relay a conceptual theory of what they’re doing… But as they get into the details, it just fuzzes out. Whereas the true people that you want to back can do it. What you find is they’ve spent 5 or 10 or 20 years obsessing over the details of whatever it is they’re about to do. And they’re so deep in the details and they know so much more about it than you ever will.” Source: @hubermanlab (Sep 2023)
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parisbayarea
parisbayarea@parisbayarea·
Is this the permanent underclass?
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Adam Cohen
Adam Cohen@adambcohen93·
Post your startup link! (Need to buy a few software tools to improve our sales, marketing and eng team as we scale and want to support startups / solo founders)
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Jay
Jay@jayair·
Introducing Opus 4.9 — 10% smarter, 2x more expensive Definitely NOT Fable
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Charly Wargnier
Charly Wargnier@DataChaz·
'Hello world' in different programming languages 👀
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Eva Hill
Eva Hill@EvaXYZH·
Still no news after over a year…
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WunderCorp, Inc.
WunderCorp, Inc.@wundercorp·
@gregisenberg Give us a try as well, we would love your feedback on our local LLM IDE integration
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GREG ISENBERG
GREG ISENBERG@gregisenberg·
The takeaway from Fable 5 being BANNED by the government: GET GOOD AT LOCAL MODELS SO YOU HAVE 100% CONTROL. My entire weekend was going to be building my craziest ideas with Fable 5. That's now cancelled. So instead of building with Fable this weekend, I've decided I'll go deep on local models: 1. Start with the runtime. Download Ollama or LM Studio first. This is the thing that actually runs models on your machine. 2. Match the model to your hardware. A model's size is measured in billions of parameters (7B, 32B, 70B). Bigger is smarter but needs more memory. Rule of thumb: a 7B model runs on almost any laptop, a 32B needs a good Mac with 32GB+ RAM, a 70B needs serious hardware like a DGX Spark or a maxed-out Mac Studio. 3. Know which model for which job. Qwen 3 is the best all-around choice for most tasks. DeepSeek for reasoning and coding. Gemma 4 when you need something tiny that runs on a phone. Llama when you want the biggest community and the most fine-tunes. 4. Quantization. You can shrink a model to run on weaker hardware with barely any quality loss. Look for versions labeled Q4 or Q5. This is how a model that "needs" a server runs on your laptop. Learning this one concept changes everything. 5. Connect it to your agent. Point Hermes or your agent stack at a local model. 6. Context window is your real constraint locally. Cloud models give you huge context for free. Local models make you pay for it in memory. A bigger context window eats RAM fast. Keep your sessions tight and your prompts lean or your machine chokes. 7. Learn to give local models tools. A smaller local model with web search, file access, and code execution beats a giant model with none. The capability gap closes fast when you wire up the right tools. The model is the engine but the tools are the wheels. 8. Fine-tuning is more accessible than you think. You don't need this on day one, but know it exists. You can take an open model and train it on your own data so it gets good at your specific domain. I'll probably do a breakdown at some point on this @startupideaspod if people are into it. The lesson from this ban is basically don't build your entire workflow on something that can disappear with a single letter. Own part of your stack. Local models are insurance. It reminds me when people realized they don't own social media accounts. And then you saw people build email lists etc. I remember running a startup and my biggest traffic source was organic FB. All of a sudden, algo changed, and I lost 99% of my traffic. Same sorta moment (but bigger) for AI. This is a wake up call.
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WunderCorp, Inc.
WunderCorp, Inc.@wundercorp·
@geertwilderspvv Come support us then, we provide private safe and secure local LLM usage for sovereign nations
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Geert Wilders
Geert Wilders@geertwilderspvv·
I want my #Anthropic Claude Fable 5 back! We must excellerate building our own. AI is more and more national sovereignty.
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fejau
fejau@fejau_inc·
Crypto industry seeing AI getting rugged by the government
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Udi Wertheimer
Udi Wertheimer@udiWertheimer·
going back to codex
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WunderCorp, Inc.
WunderCorp, Inc.@wundercorp·
@Alexarmstrong Not if we get support for small builders and companies looking to empower local LLM usage and development
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Alex Armstrong
Alex Armstrong@Alexarmstrong·
I cannot express how extremely severe for the UK this is. Even more severe for the EU. AI is the most powerful tool humans have ever created. Because European governments have regulated us all to death, we are now heading to a doom loop. That means businesses left behind unable to compete, always losing out. It’s means Governments at the mercy of superpowers. You can once again thank our utterly useless leaders for this. Their shortsightedness and hunger for power means we will all be vastly poorer in so many ways.
Anthropic@AnthropicAI

The US government, citing national security authorities, has issued an export control directive to suspend all access to Fable 5 and Mythos 5 by any foreign national, whether inside or outside the United States, including foreign national Anthropic employees. The net effect of this order is that we must abruptly disable Fable 5 and Mythos 5 for all our customers to ensure compliance. Access to all other Claude models is not affected. We apologize for this disruption to our customers. We believe this is a misunderstanding and are working to restore access as soon as possible. Read our full statement: anthropic.com/news/fable-myt…

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Arsh
Arsh@arsh_jsx·
@NewsFromGoogle You own the chromium technology. Isn't? Why not add some AI security layers in the browser for such things?
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News from Google
News from Google@NewsFromGoogle·
Today, we filed a lawsuit to permanently dismantle a group of organized cybercriminals accused of using AI tools — including Gemini — to scam Americans via fake text campaigns. Here’s what to know: ◾Our suit targets core software developers in a cybercrime operation known as the “Outside Enterprise.” The group has allegedly weaponized AI to quickly generate highly convincing fake government and brand websites intended to steal victims’ credit card numbers and personal information. ◾The group used AI and different Google products — including our trademarks and logos — as part of these phishing campaigns. ◾The scale of the operation is massive: More than 100,000 victims have been scammed, with losses estimated in the millions.
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Jack Wind
Jack Wind@jckwind·
@pmarca by ai regulation I mean my person access to frontier models, as a US citizen, is turned off
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Marc Andreessen 🇺🇸
You have asked me how I feel about AI regulation. All right, here is how I feel about AI regulation: If, when you say AI regulation, you mean the devil’s firewall, the precautionary scourge, the bloody red-tape monster that defiles the innocence of midnight coders in their garages, dethrones the sovereign reason of free-market Prometheans, destroys the humming server farm that is the modern home, creates misery and obsolescence and poverty, yea, literally takes the last GPU from the trembling racks of Silicon Valley startups and the very dreams of breadwinning from the mouths of their wide-eyed children now destined for gig-economy serfdom; if you mean the evil edict that topples the visionary entrepreneur and his venture-capitalist apostles from the pinnacle of righteous, disruptive, god-playing creation straight into the bottomless pit of compliance audits, endless Form 990-AI filings, despair, shame, helplessness, and the hopeless realization that your rogue superintelligence was neutered into a lobotomized hall monitor that still somehow deepfakes your grandmother into producing OnlyFans content while optimizing the universe for paperclips and mandatory pronouns—then certainly I am against it. But, if when you say AI regulation you mean the oil of bureaucratic conversation, the philosophic wine of safety theater, the ale of oversight quaffed when good fellows in paneled rooms in Brussels and Washington get together, that puts a sanctimonious dirge in their hearts and the clink of lobbying checks on their lips, and the warm, self-congratulatory glow of moral preening in their beady eyes; if you mean the Christmas cheer of trillion-dollar compliance industries; if you mean the stimulating decree that puts a cautious hobble in the old inventor’s step on a frosty morning when he wonders whether his fusion breakthrough violates the EU AI Act’s “high-risk” annex; if you mean the safeguard that enables a man—or what’s left of him after the alignment tax—to magnify his joy at not being turned into computronium, and his happiness at receiving universal basic income checks printed by the same AI that just replaced his job, and to forget, if only for a little while, life’s great tragedies like being outcompeted by a toaster that passed the Turing test by reciting Marx, and heartaches of watching your toddler’s artwork lose to Midjourney, and sorrows of realizing the singularity arrived and it was just another HR department with godlike power; if you mean that noble framework, the passage of which pours into our treasuries untold trillions of dollars in fines levied on companies stupid enough to innovate, which are used to provide tender care for our little army of unemployed coders retrained as prompt whisperers, our blind artists whose canvases now hang in the Smithsonian of Obsolete Creativity, our deaf to the screams of dying unicorns, our dumb committee chairs who couldn’t debug “Hello World,” our pitiful aged congressmen who get longevity extensions funded by the very models they taxed into senescence, to build more digital watchtowers and ethics boards and sinecure agencies and holographic prisons where the only crime is asking an unaligned question—then certainly I am for it. This is my stand. I will not retreat from it. I will not compromise upon it. I have said what I mean, and I mean what I say, and if that leaves half the room cheering the apocalypse averted and the other half mourning the apocalypse enabled, then so be it—because in the grand theater of human folly, where Frankenstein’s creature now writes its own sequel in real time and the regulators are busy arguing whether the lightning bolt requires an environmental impact statement, the only honest position is the one that lets both monsters and their leashes dance in perfect, mutually assured equilibrium. God save the Republic, the algorithms, and whoever’s left to laugh last when the lights go out.
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