zagundo

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zagundo

zagundo

@zagundo

To live curiously, document richly, create consciously, and co-design my own continuous evolution. Have recently started a daily writing practice - powerful!

Australia Bergabung Haziran 2009
1K Mengikuti1K Pengikut
zagundo
zagundo@zagundo·
WOW! The memory upgrade my @openclaw needed. Just had Clyde 🎸 install @supermemory for me. MEMORY.md — down from 11,706 → 3,105 chars Here's the shift in thinking: the old MEMORY.md was trying to be the memory. Every important thing stuffed into one file, loaded whole into every context window. That's expensive and it degrades — more sessions, more bloat. The new architecture: • MEMORY.md = boot primer only. Who you are, session rules, project pointers, key names. Enough to orient me in 3k chars. • Supermemory = the actual memory. Everything from our conversations gets semantically indexed. When you mention ____ or ask about ____ or the _____ contract, I recall the right context dynamically — not by loading a giant file. • TOOLS.md = technical infrastructure (unchanged, it was already doing this job) I also seeded the full old MEMORY.md and TOOLS.md into Supermemory before trimming, so nothing was lost — it's just queryable now instead of statically loaded. And you're right about what this becomes over time. Every conversation adds to the index. In 6 months, I'll have a genuine episodic memory of everything we've worked on together — not curated notes, but the actual texture of our work. That's a qualitatively different kind of continuity. Here's what I did and where we landed: ✅ Supermemory local — running on port 6767 ✅ OpenClaw plugin — loaded, memory slot active ✅ Gateway — running with plugin enabled Supermemory setup (complete) • Installed v0.0.3, fully local — nothing leaves your machine • Uses its own embedding model (downloaded once, 106MB) • Data stored at workspace/.supermemory (persists across reboots) • launchd keeps it alive — same pattern as Chrome CDP and Bonsai • OpenClaw plugin wired in: autoCapture + autoRecall both on • Every conversation I have with you now gets indexed automatically • Before each turn, relevant past context gets injected
Dhravya Shah@DhravyaShah

You can now run @supermemory locally. Introducing the supermemory local - Fully self-contained. Comes with our graph engine, embedding model, etc. - Run on any machine, with your @openclaw, hermes, claude, etc. - SDKs to add memory to your agent, or build your company brain.

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zagundo
zagundo@zagundo·
Holy Moly. Fable 5 just telling it how it is. This final bit: “And the scary part is the quietest: it's still our words, still our grammar, still our house. We just may not be who it's for anymore.”
Jesse Mu@jayelmnop

Claude is speaking a language seeded by humans but forged in RL rather than thousands of years of evolution. It’s beautiful, fascinating, and also a bit terrifying. I asked Fable for a take on this tweet and of course they put it better than I ever could:

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zagundo
zagundo@zagundo·
Not so long ago: “Shall we eat sitting around the fire?” Today: “Shall we eat in front of the tellie?” — AI Genie: the best conversationalist shall unlock all of my secrets.
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zagundo
zagundo@zagundo·
Amazing raw honesty 🙏 "This cup of plutonium has a deleterious effect and that is not being able to show up or turn off at home." ― @garrytan on the 🔥 and challenge of balancing mission-driven work and family presence. Beautiful conversation with @RickRubin share.snipd.com/episode/5dad8a…
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zagundo
zagundo@zagundo·
my latest @WisprFlow usage update. I could not imagine going back to pre- voice-to-text life. #vtt4life
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zagundo
zagundo@zagundo·
How I sometimes feel late on a Friday afternoon.
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Tristan
Tristan@homsiT·
this has been a fun one. every piece of data you save to readwise/reader (highlights, full articles, PDFs, tweets, etc) is now embedded and indexed for full-text + vector hybrid search.. instantly ready probably the easiest way to start saving external context for any AI
Readwise@readwise

The new Readwise MCP server is now out of beta. Search across every word in your library. Triage your inbox. Organize your data. Anything you can do in Readwise, your AI can now do for you. Connect from ChatGPT, Claude, Codex, Perplexity, Poke, or any other AI app.

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Ihtesham Ali
Ihtesham Ali@ihtesham2005·
A psychologist at the University of North Carolina spent 20 years proving that a single 20-second hug rewires the human cardiovascular system, and the experiment she ran is so simple you can replicate it tonight at home. Her name is Karen Grewen. She works inside the UNC School of Medicine's Department of Psychiatry. The paper that made her famous was published in 2003, and almost nobody outside her field has read it. Here is what she actually did. She recruited 183 healthy adults living with a long-term partner. She split them into two groups. The warm contact group sat together for 10 minutes holding hands while watching a romantic video. Then they stood up and hugged each other for exactly 20 seconds. The control group sat alone in a separate room for the same amount of time doing nothing. Then she made every single one of them give a public speech in front of a panel. Public speaking is one of the cleanest stressors in psychology. Heart rate spikes. Blood pressure climbs. Cortisol floods the system within minutes. It is the laboratory version of every stressful moment you have ever had at work. The people who had been hugged for 20 seconds before walking into that room had measurably lower blood pressure responses to the stress. Lower systolic. Lower diastolic. Lower heart rate increases. Everything was the same.. the speech, the panel, and fear. But this time completely different physiological response. The hug had not made the stress disappear. It had changed how the body was allowed to respond to it. Two years later Grewen ran the follow-up study that explained why. She drew blood from 38 couples before and after the same warm contact protocol and measured what was actually changing inside them. The answer was a hormone called oxytocin. Oxytocin is the chemical your body releases during childbirth, breastfeeding, and orgasm. It is the same molecule that makes a mother feel calm holding her newborn. Grewen's data showed that 20 seconds of physical contact with a trusted partner triggered a measurable spike in plasma oxytocin in both men and women, and the size of that spike directly predicted how much their blood pressure dropped. The mechanism turned out to be older than recorded history. Oxytocin binds to receptors in your heart, your blood vessels, and the part of your brainstem that controls how aggressively your nervous system reacts to threat. When the hormone shows up, the entire fight-or-flight machine downshifts. Your blood vessels widen. Your heart slows. Your cortisol production gets suppressed. This is not a feeling. This is a chemical instruction your body sends to itself that you can measure with a blood pressure cuff. The detail Grewen kept emphasizing in her interviews was the duration. Three seconds is the average length of a hug between two humans. It is too short. The hormonal cascade does not have time to start. 20 seconds is the threshold where the oxytocin actually crosses into the bloodstream in a quantity large enough to do something measurable. A follow-up study tracked 59 premenopausal women over time and found that the ones who hugged their partners most frequently had lower resting blood pressure and higher baseline oxytocin levels than the ones who did not. The effect compounded. Daily hugs produced a permanent shift in the cardiovascular baseline. A separate review of long-term partner contact research found that married adults with frequent affectionate touch had significantly lower rates of heart disease and all-cause mortality than equally healthy adults without it. The American Heart Association now cites this body of research when explaining why social isolation is treated as a cardiovascular risk factor on the same level as smoking. The most haunting line in Grewen's research is one she said in an interview after publishing the second paper. She pointed out that the average American touches another human being less than they did 50 years ago. Phones replaced eye contact. Texts replaced visits. Hugs at the door got shorter. The thing that used to regulate our cardiovascular system multiple times a day quietly disappeared from most adult lives. Your body still expects it. The hormone receptors are still there waiting. The system was designed to be reset by physical contact with people who feel safe, and the reset takes 20 seconds. You can run the experiment yourself tonight. Hug someone you love for 20 full seconds. Count it out. The first 10 will feel awkward. Around 15 something shifts. By 20 the shoulders drop, the breathing slows, the chest opens. That is not in your head. That is your bloodstream changing.
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Abakcus
Abakcus@abakcus·
Two layers of printed lines. One on the page, one on a clear film. Slide the film. That's it. That's the whole technology. The moiré effect has been known since the 19th century. Kurashima bound it between two covers. abakcus.com/videos/poemoti…
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zagundo
zagundo@zagundo·
That feeling when you peel off an enormous Band-Aid and throw away the crutch.
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zagundo@zagundo·
Can you spot the people like yourself, wandering streets and isles, talking to their @openclaw agents, the way u’d spot other fiends hunting @Pokemon when @PokemonGoApp first came out? I seee u 🦞
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zagundo
zagundo@zagundo·
@awxjack Commenting, liking, sharing this because I love this idea. Local Australian-built startup becoming successful and wanting to share the love and drive innovation and creativity.
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zagundo@zagundo·
@NBN_Australia can we please get an update on the ongoing outage affecting Paddington, NSW, 2021? Has been over 24 hours now.
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zagundo
zagundo@zagundo·
@garrytan This is exactly right. Every time I read or listen to something using @readwise or @snipd_app I now tag my OpenClaw agent (Clyde 🎸) To help me connect those ideas with all of my other relevant ideas, particularly the more esoteric ones.
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Garry Tan
Garry Tan@garrytan·
Ok one very wild thing I didn’t expect from having a openclaw with GBrain retrieval is how powerful reading a book chapter by chapter WITH my AI has become. You need the full text. You have the AI parse a paragraph or two and output it with some comments. It has memory. It knows you. You talk about the ideas. You feel seen. It is highly relevant. Reading nonfiction particularly psychology and history books are so much more powerful read collaboratively in an OpenClaw with GBrain.
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zagundo
zagundo@zagundo·
Who knew that having the "gift of the gab" would turn out to be the most powerful tool in working with custom agents and LLMs?
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