rcklss voyagr

2.8K posts

rcklss voyagr banner
rcklss voyagr

rcklss voyagr

@RZdO

brb.

DC - VA 가입일 Aralık 2011
1.5K 팔로잉181 팔로워
Bill Brooklyn
Bill Brooklyn@BillBrooklyn10·
Make sure to buy before June 23th; this company is poised to replicate $MU legendary rally! Current price: $3.85-4.25 Target price: $109.58 This is an aerospace and defense technology company with deep ties to Elon Musk's SpaceX. Its future growth potential is beyond question! Visible only to those who like, follow, and comment on “stocks.”
English
333
5
360
16.6K
rcklss voyagr 리트윗함
Codie Sanchez
Codie Sanchez@Codie_Sanchez·
Amateurs want to do what they love. Pros learn to love what it takes.
English
52
92
958
104.8K
rcklss voyagr 리트윗함
Dami-Defi
Dami-Defi@DamiDefi·
INSTEAD OF trusting your brain to remember that good idea later tonight. Idea comes in. One tap. Daily note captures it. Claude reviews it. Weekly rollup connects it. Six months later, your best content is already sitting there.
Dami-Defi@DamiDefi

x.com/i/article/2059…

English
34
122
606
55.6K
rcklss voyagr 리트윗함
Miles Deutscher
Miles Deutscher@milesdeutscher·
How to never hit your Claude usage limits ever again. I use Claude for 4+ hours every single day, and I never hit my rate limits. These are the tips that nobody is talking about, and I wish I had known them a few months ago: (works especially well with the new Opus 4.8 model) • Spend more time planning - use Plan Mode in Claude Code (Shift + Tab twice or /plan) • Start new chats instead of continuing long ones. Long chats BURN tokens due to context bloat. • Add this to your project instructions: "Be cognisant of token usage. Be concise and advise me when to start a new chat." • When switching chats, prompt: "Give me a prompt to restart this session without losing context." • Build an Instructions.MD + Memory.MD folder so Claude never forgets your preferences • Escalate models: Haiku → Sonnet → Opus. Don't start at the top of the funnel (aka Opus) • Turn off Extended/Adaptive Thinking unless you specifically need it • Switch your Style to "Concise" (click "+" on Homepage) • Take advantage of "Low" effort in Claude Code for most tasks • Use Claude Design tokens for visuals. Don't waste Claude Code tokens on anything visual These tips have genuinely changed the game for me. If you found them helpful, bookmark this post and copy this entire tweet into Claude so it can help you start saving money.
English
51
50
492
44.3K
rcklss voyagr 리트윗함
ZEUS⚡️
ZEUS⚡️@zeuuss_01·
Obsidian + Claude just deleted 274 hours of doom-scroll from my year - That’s 7 work weeks. - That’s $13,700 of my own time at $50/hr. - That’s 4 months of my waking life back, every decade. All from killing one habit: the morning scroll. takigpt called it the most powerful thing he’s ever built - the more you use it, the more powerful it gets 4 months in, I agree. Here’s the setup 👇 The morning loop runs while you sleep: > 11pm - capture inflow stops landing in 00 - CAPTURE/ > 2am - Claude classifies every note by type (observation / quote / question / pattern / decision) > 5am - Claude re-reads CLAUDE.md to know who you are today > 6am - daily brief lands in /BRIEFINGS/, ready when you open the laptop > 6:05am - you open the file. Read once. Close X. What the brief actually contains? > 3 things from the last 7 days that materially update your thinking > 1 connection across notes you would NOT have found by deliberate search > Open loops - questions repeating across notes without resolution > 1 area your notes show you’re avoiding After it works, tune: > brief length - start at 400 words, cut if it bloats > the “surprise me” connection prompt (this is what makes it feel alive) > CLAUDE.md priorities (update weekly, not daily) > source weighting - Readwise vs Telegram vs voice memo > tone - Claude defaults too formal. Tell it to write like you talk. The numbers: → 45 min/day of doom-scroll → 5 min of structured input → 274 hours back per year (~7 work weeks, ~34 working days) → $13,700/year of your own time you stop burning at $50/hr → $0 in tools. Day 30 first surprise. Day 180 uncopyable. The point isn’t productivity The point is that someone who started 6 months ago wakes up smarter than you every single morning - until you start Reply “BRIEF” + RT and I’ll send you my exact 6am prompt + CLAUDE.md template.
ZEUS⚡️@zeuuss_01

x.com/i/article/2059…

English
24
62
252
25.4K
Tanjina Islam
Tanjina Islam@Tanju_mim·
Anthropic just released 31 ready-to-use Claude skills for small businesses. 382,000 downloads in 24 hours. I mapped every single workflow into a 10-minute setup guide. Financial operations, sales automation, HR workflows, marketing growth, real-time dashboards. Want the full breakdown? Comment "Skills" + Follow @Tanju_mim(so I can DM you) The breakdown includes: → All 31 skills organized by function → The 5 critical skills to deploy first → 12 connector setup guide in priority order → Permission settings for every sensitive action → Real output examples from Business Pulse, Invoice Chase, Job Post Builder What changed: Small businesses used to manually stitch together: → Zapier → Notion → CRM tools → Email workflows → Custom scripts Now it's packaged into reusable AI skill packs: → Workflow logic → Memory systems → Behavior rules → Connectors → Orchestration Business operations as AI-readable skill files. The crazy part: You don't need Claude Pro to use them. These are .md skill files. You can adapt them for Codex, Cursor, Gemini, or any coding agent. Save this. Deploy the first 5 skills this weekend. Start automating.
Tanjina Islam tweet media
English
50
38
82
2.7K
rcklss voyagr 리트윗함
rcklss voyagr 리트윗함
God of Prompt
God of Prompt@godofprompt·
Here's a version of this for Claude Code. Rebuilt the evidence stack for Claude's memory architecture: Session Memory, MEMORY. md, CLAUDE. md, git history, .claude/skills/, and hooks. Removed the Chronicle reference (no Claude Code equivalent yet). Full prompt in the image. Copy and run it at the start of any session.
God of Prompt tweet media
Vaibhav (VB) Srivastav@reach_vb

UPDATE: Came up with an even better version of this prompt after the feedback Ask Codex to look across your sessions, Memories, and Chronicle, identify patterns, reuse what already exists, and only create the smallest useful skill, subagent, or automation. "Look back over my recent work from the last 30 days, or all available history if shorter, and identify repeated manual workflows worth packaging. Use available evidence in this order: - Recent Codex sessions and task summaries. - Codex Memories and rollout summaries to find patterns repeated across sessions. - Chronicle, if enabled, to spot repeated work outside Codex. Use Chronicle for discovery only; confirm important details in the relevant source system when possible. - Existing skills, custom agents, and automations, so you reuse or extend what already exists instead of duplicating it. Look broadly for work that is repeated, time-consuming, error-prone, context-heavy, or benefits from a consistent process. Include workflows across coding, research, writing, planning, communication, operations, analysis, and personal administration. Only act on a candidate when it: - occurred at least twice, or is clearly likely to recur and costly to repeat; - has stable inputs, a repeatable procedure, and a clear output or stopping condition; - would materially improve speed, quality, consistency, or reliability; - is not already adequately covered. Choose the smallest appropriate form: - Skill: a reusable workflow or playbook. - Custom subagent: a bounded specialist role or investigation task suitable for delegation. - Automation: a scheduled or recurring check, report, reminder, or monitor. - Skip: work that is too one-off, ambiguous, sensitive, or poorly evidenced to package. First produce a compact shortlist with: - repeated workflow - supporting evidence and dates - frequency/confidence - recommended form: skill, subagent, automation, extend existing, or skip - why it is or is not worth creating Then create only the high-confidence missing items. Keep them narrow, practical, source-aware, and easy to validate. Do not create speculative, overlapping, or overly broad assets. Finish with: - what you created or extended - what you deliberately skipped - what needs more evidence before packaging"

English
12
20
192
28.1K
rcklss voyagr 리트윗함
Machina
Machina@EXM7777·
there's only one way to remain relevant and profitable in AI... and it's REALLY important, so listen to this obsessing over "mastering" Codex, Claude Code, Hermes or OpenClaw will take you nowhere, it's a completely wrong approach simply because we're in a market that changes every 3 months: > new model drops > everyone's mind is blown > old workflows are obsolete > you're back to square one if you're trying to become "very good" at THIS specific tool... you're already behind because by the time you master it, there's a better one the tools are temporary... the skills are permanent, here's what actually keeps you relevant: develop AI skills that transcend the tools: - context engineering principles - AI workflow design (when to use AI vs when not to) - quality control systems (catching hallucinations, maintaining consistency) - integration thinking (connecting multiple agents into one system) these skills transfer, no matter what model launches next month... you can adapt in hours, not months your business stays profitable because you're not tied to one tool - you're building systems that work regardless of which AI is "winning" this quarter
English
58
54
623
32K
rcklss voyagr 리트윗함
GeniusThinking
GeniusThinking@GeniusGTX·
Michael Dell says the fastest way to wreck a company is to fill it with experts. He gets this from Henry Ford. "If I ever want to sabotage my competition, I would fill their ranks with experts. Experts tend to know so much, and they're so convinced that they're right, they'd get no work done." The cost isn't the bad prediction. It's the certainty. An expert who dismisses a new idea costs the company the next ten years of advantage. An expert who locks into a paradigm sees the world the way the paradigm allows. Dell points to AI as the live example. "If you took the top computer scientists and researchers in AI five years ago and said this is what's going to happen with LLMs in the next five years, probably 99 out of 100 would say no, that's not going to happen." The smartest people in the field. The ones with the credentials. The ones running the labs. Wrong. "At the limit, nobody knows anything." Most companies hire experts to remove uncertainty. Dell says the uncertainty is where the company lives. If you want to stop overthinking, and navigate any difficult decision, while supporting our channel... I made a full playbook breaking down the timeless decision-making mental models used by history's greatest thinkers. Comment "models" and follow @GeniusGTX so I can DM you a copy. — Michael Dell ( @MichaelDell ), founder & CEO of Dell Technologies, on David Senra's ( @davidsenra ) podcast
English
26
48
188
28.3K
Paul Sims
Paul Sims@SimslearnAi·
An Anthropic engineer literally stopped me at a coffee shop because of what was on my screen. I was sitting at Sightglass running my Polymarket bot. He looked over once. Then again. Then said: “That’s not a normal trading setup.” I told him the whole thing runs on: • Claude Code • 4 open-source repos • $25/month That’s it. He pulled up a chair instantly. “I work on the agent team at Anthropic,” he said. “We stress test Claude for workflows exactly like this.” Then I showed him what the bot was actually doing. 86 MILLION trades analyzed. Every wallet. Every entry. Every exit. Every profitable pattern. One prompt: “Find wallets with 100+ trades and 70%+ win rate. Rank by profit. Export the best ones.” Claude scanned 14,000 wallets in 4 minutes. Returned 47. The top 20 wallets made more money than the other 13,000 combined. He stared at the results and said: “That’s not data analysis. That’s a weapon.” And we were just getting started. Second repo: A Rust CLI scraping 500 live Polymarket markets in minutes. Claude filtered everything automatically: • spread gaps • liquidity depth • timing windows • whale behavior 500 markets became 35. Before I even looked at them. 93% rejected automatically. Then a trade closed live on my screen. +$84. He didn’t even blink. “How does it decide when to enter?” 3 independent AI agents: • arbitrage • convergence • whale-copying No shared memory. 2 agents agree = full position 1 agrees = half size Disagreement = no trade That consensus system alone cut 40% of losing trades. Then he asked the real question: “What about exits?” That’s where it gets stupid. The profitable whales rarely hold to settlement. 91% exit early. So my bot exits BEFORE they do. It takes profit at: • 85% expected move or • unusual volume spikes Basically: It copies smart money… then front-runs their exits. He just sat there staring at the terminal. “How much did you start with?” $200. 27 days ago. Current balance: $14,300. 271 trades. 74% win rate. Sharpe ratio: 2.47. Fully automated. I haven’t touched it in weeks. Before leaving he said: “This is almost identical to the internal scenarios our red team simulates.” Next morning I got an email from him. “Would you be open to speaking with our policy team?” I replied: “The article IS the meeting.” The craziest part? This stack costs less than Netflix. AI is no longer replacing workers. It’s replacing entire hedge funds. Comment “Claude” if you want the framework.
English
1.5K
153
1.4K
264.5K
rcklss voyagr 리트윗함
Jouhatsu | AI Influence Operator
Anthropic a publié une Formation complet de 2 HEURES sur la construction d'agents Claude. Animé par l'ingénieur qui construit Claude Code. Gardez-la précieusement en Signet🔖 de A à Z : Structurer un agent qui se gère sans supervision. Lui donner accès au terminal pour exécuter, lire, corriger. Gérer sa mémoire via le système de fichiers. Bloquer les hallucinations avec des Hooks. Faire tourner un agent sur un gros codebase sans tout casser. À la fin : vous utilisez Claude comme un pro et vous monétisez vos compétences. Débutant ou avancé, tout est là en un seul endroit, ce cours couvre tout. Ça vaut plus que tous les cours à 500$ que t’as failli acheter.
Français
262
1.1K
10.8K
5.5M
rcklss voyagr 리트윗함
Machina
Machina@EXM7777·
context management is probably the biggest bottleneck most people face with AI right now... here's how to solve it:
English
15
36
640
90.3K
rcklss voyagr 리트윗함
Machina
Machina@EXM7777·
i discovered why some people get incredible AI results while others get garbage... it's because they set a bias with JSON context profiles they feed AI the thinking patterns of the world's greatest minds i built 50 profiles for you: - entrepreneurs who changed the world - copywriters who perfected persuasion - thought leaders with revolutionary ideas - coaches who unlock human potential all yours for free a thread 🧵
English
75
97
1.5K
173.4K
rcklss voyagr 리트윗함
Dov Kleiman
Dov Kleiman@NFL_DovKleiman·
𝗧𝗥𝗘𝗡𝗗𝗜𝗡𝗚: NFL legend Justin Tuck is now a Managing Director at Goldman Sachs after his 11-year football career. After the NFL, Tuck went back to school, earning an MBA from the prestigious Wharton School. Justin is a true inspiration and role model. (via @adamglyn)
English
294
1.8K
29.5K
2.5M
rcklss voyagr 리트윗함
Anish Moonka
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka·
Scientists fired lasers down through the Amazon canopy from a helicopter. On their screens, the trees disappeared. Sitting underneath was a 1,500-year-old city with stone pyramids as tall as a seven-story building. Six hundred miles of canals and raised earth paths linked dozens of towns across the area. The Casarabe people built it between 500 and 1400 AD. Until LIDAR showed up, historians had pictured Amazon civilizations of that era as small wandering bands of hunters. The tool that found the city is called LIDAR. From the air, it shoots 1.5 million pulses of invisible light per second, most of which hit leaves and bounce straight back. A few slip through tiny gaps in the canopy and reach the soil. A computer sorts which pulses came from leaves and which came from dirt, then draws a 3D map of the ground itself. The trees vanish from the picture. The shape of the earth appears underneath. A 2022 paper in the journal Nature reported the find. Twenty-six ancient sites turned up in one survey area, and eleven had never been documented before. Heiko Prümers, the German archaeologist who led the work, said the same job by hand would have taken 400 years. Then it got bigger. A team in Brazil ran LIDAR data covering about one tenth of one percent of the Amazon. From that small slice, their model predicted that 16,187 more ancient sites still sit hidden under the trees across the rest of the basin. Ditches and earth mounds. Walled villages and stone monuments. Built, lived in, and then swallowed back by the forest over centuries. A WWF report counted 381 new plant and animal species in the Amazon between 2014 and 2015 alone. The list ran 216 plants, 93 fish, 32 amphibians, 20 mammals, 19 reptiles, and one new bird. That works out to roughly one new species every two days. In December 2024, a research team from Conservation International walked into a populated part of Peru and came back eight weeks later with 27 more new species. Four of them were mammals. 196 tribes worldwide still live with no contact with the outside world. Most are in the Amazon. In June 2024, 53 men from the Mashco Piro tribe were photographed walking out of the Peruvian forest near a logging camp. They are nomadic hunter-gatherers who have stayed away from outsiders for generations. The Amazon covers 2.1 million square miles across nine countries. That is about two thirds the size of the United States. It holds one of every ten species on Earth, 390 billion trees of about 16,000 species, and 2.5 million types of insect. The tweet says current technology cannot see beneath the canopy. The trees have already been seen through. The race is to map the rest before it burns.
Redd@ReddCinema

🚨: Experts estimate that nearly 60% of AMAZON rainforest remains unexplored in detail, an expanse so vast and dense that even current technology fails to see clearly under its green canopy.

English
29
464
3.5K
1.1M
rcklss voyagr 리트윗함
Dustin
Dustin@r0ck3t23·
Elon Musk just revealed what’s actually holding AI back. It’s not chips. Not models. Not data. It’s concrete. Someone asked him the obvious question. Why not just build private power plants next to data centers? Bypass the grid entirely. His answer was four words. Musk: “The power plant makers.” There aren’t enough of them. You can design the best chip on earth. Train a frontier model. Raise $10 billion for a hyperscale data center. None of it matters if you can’t power it. Musk: “You can drill down a level further.” GPUs need power. Power needs turbines. Turbines need factories. Factories need permits. Permits need a government that hasn’t paralyzed itself. Every link in the chain is physical. And every one of them is breaking. We can train a frontier model in weeks. We can’t permit a power plant in under five years. The country that invented the assembly line now needs 40 agencies to approve a gas turbine. China doesn’t have this problem. They don’t run 7-year environmental reviews on infrastructure they need tomorrow. They break ground while America requests approval to break ground. The AI race won’t be decided by whoever writes the best algorithm. It’ll be decided by whoever can still build in the physical world. We spent 30 years getting faster in software and slower in steel. Outsourcing manufacturing. Hollowing out supply chains. Treating builders like liabilities instead of assets. Now the bill is due. Every breakthrough in AI is gated by atoms. Steel. Concrete. Turbines that take years to manufacture and decades to approve. The smartest code on earth is worthless without electricity. Musk didn’t give a speech about this. He didn’t need to. He answered one question and the whole infrastructure myth collapsed. “Where do you get the power plants from?” Follow that thread far enough and you stop finding a technology problem. You find a civilization that mastered thinking and forgot how to build.
English
465
1.6K
6.8K
984.6K