



Introducing Cowork: Claude Code for the rest of your work. Cowork lets you complete non-technical tasks much like how developers use Claude Code.
FireHacker
7.8K posts

@thefirehacker
Founder-AI Researcher. Building BubblSpace & Timecapsule




Introducing Cowork: Claude Code for the rest of your work. Cowork lets you complete non-technical tasks much like how developers use Claude Code.










Earlier this week, we published our technical report on Composer 2. We're sharing additional research on how we train new checkpoints. With real-time RL, we can ship improved versions of the model every five hours.


LiteLLM HAS BEEN COMPROMISED, DO NOT UPDATE. We just discovered that LiteLLM pypi release 1.82.8. It has been compromised, it contains litellm_init.pth with base64 encoded instructions to send all the credentials it can find to remote server + self-replicate. link below



the founder of openclaw joined the company that was founded to make AI open and now charges you per token. and is now telling you open models aren't there yet. i run qwen 3.5 27b on a single 3090. 50 tok/s. it writes code, handles tool calls, runs agent sessions for hours. the model built a full space shooter, 3,000+ lines, from a single prompt. i published the data. "open models aren't there yet" is what you say when your harness can't parse tool calls on local models and you blame the model instead of fixing the harness. i have the DMs. people switch from openclaw to hermes agent and their "broken" models suddenly work. pair a good model with a good harness like hermes agent where parsers are built per model. your data stays on your machine. no API key. 0 subscription. no one training their next model on your thinking. don't listen to someone with an OpenAI paycheck telling you open source can't do the job. install it. test it yourself. the receipts are on my timeline. he built a harness that couldn't handle local models and chose the API paycheck over fixing it. that should tell you everything.

the default yc round this batch (W26) seems like 4m on 40m I remember when I first started in venture exactly three years ago (W23 batch) and most venture ppl were complaining about YC pushing their founders to do 2m on 20m in 3 years the market went from a very begrudging 2 on 20 to a more neutral 4 on 40 interesting to think about where things land 3 years from here

Raising funding from VCs in India is significantly more difficult compared to raising funding in Silicon Valley. Do not let anyone tell you otherwise. If anyone tells you that it is not, they are lying! In India, apart from your "key unobvious insight", you need 1/3 things (depending on the VC): 1. Hockey Stick Growth 2. Significant Retention 3. Money in the Bank Been on both sides of the table (trying to raise and doing due diligence for VCs), so can assure you that no one, I repeat no one is going to take a bet on you at idea stage. Unless you are a rockstar in your field or have a rockstar founding team with people who have raised money before and successfully returned money to their previous investors!