Greg Marlin

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Greg Marlin

Greg Marlin

@GregMarlin

CTO @ZKcandyHQ Founder @ceo__ai author of ERC-7662 draft standard for AI Agent NFTs

Katılım Kasım 2011
165 Takip Edilen1.3K Takipçiler
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Greg Marlin
Greg Marlin@GregMarlin·
Big things coming soon on @ZKcandyHQ - can't wait to show what we've been up to.
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Greg Marlin
Greg Marlin@GregMarlin·
@steipete I spec’d this out a while back when someone else was complaining about something similar. Should work via Githb Actions workflow with external call - I can configure a CEO.ai agent(s) to handle it via api with RAG memory etc. Happy to help.
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Peter Steinberger 🦞
Peter Steinberger 🦞@steipete·
PRs on OpenClaw are growing at an *impossible* rate. Worked all day yesterday and got like 600 commits in. It was 2700; now it's over 3100. I need AI that scans every PR and Issue and de-dupes. It should also detect which PR is the based based on various signals (so really also a deep review is needed) Ideally it should also have a vision document to mark/reject PRs that stray too far. This can't be fully automated, but even assisting would help. The closes I found is an obscure oss project. How's no startup working on this?
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Greg Marlin
Greg Marlin@GregMarlin·
@SahilBloom CEO.ai works well for this (no $5k needed but pay $800 in credits and you join the private 800 club forum). And I think you could build some kick ass agents in your areas of expertise and earn passive income. Will send you an invite code next week.
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Sahil Bloom
Sahil Bloom@SahilBloom·
There's an opportunity right now to build a $100k per month side hustle as an AI Concierge. And you don't even have to be *that* technical to do it. Just high agency. There are probably millions of people out there who see all of the latest AI innovations like Claude Cowork, want to take advantage of them, but have no idea how to actually do that. I know, because I'm one of those people... I had dinner last night with the CEO of a multi-billion dollar tech startup. He was telling me about the full digital assistant/employee he just hacked together over the weekend. All of the things it's doing, how it's been an unlock for his workflows and life. I told him I'd gladly pay him $5000 to come to my house and spend the day building me one using the same approach. He laughed that he'd happily do that (though obviously won't given his day job). There's a real, high cash flow opportunity for a hustler to launch a services business as an AI Concierge for the tech curious. Ideally they would physically show up and build out a tool (or suite) to help an individual leverage the latest for their business and life. I bet you could charge $5-10k for the initial upfront work and then some low ongoing service fee to keep the thing up to date (if the person wants that and needs help with it). 5-10 clients per month and you have a meaningful cash flow engine. All comes down to the quality of what you deliver long term, but my guess is people would see a Month 1 positive ROI on the investment and referrals to their friends would drive the entire business. Just a thought...
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Greg Marlin
Greg Marlin@GregMarlin·
@mitchellh Have you thought about adding an Agent to automatically read the external PRs for you and close the ones that don’t match a quality metric you design?
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Mitchell Hashimoto
Mitchell Hashimoto@mitchellh·
I've been doing open source since I was a teenager (over 20yrs). And for the first time ever, I'm considering closing external PRs to my OSS projects completely. This will throw the baby out with the bathwater and I hate that, but we close auto-opened slop PRs every single day.
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Greg Marlin
Greg Marlin@GregMarlin·
@brankopetric00 Skill up an Agent on CEO.ai and show them how to use it. They’ll be ready in a week and use it every day. Platform will be ready in 1 month on A or B both good options.
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Branko
Branko@brankopetric00·
New startup. You're the first infrastructure hire. CTO wants the platform ready in 3 months. Option A: Kubernetes from day one - Future-proof - Steep learning curve - Longer initial setup - Easier to scale later Option B: Simple ECS + Fargate - Faster to production - Less operational overhead - Might need migration later - AWS lock-in Option C: Just EC2 + Docker Compose - Fastest MVP - Manual scaling - Technical debt guaranteed - Cheapest short-term Team size: 4 developers (none with K8s experience) Expected growth: 10x users in 12 months Funding: Series A secured What's your recommendation?
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Andrei De Stefani
Andrei De Stefani@AndreiDeStefani·
I'm joining @base My past 4 months: - 6 consecutive hackathon wins - Won @HyperliquidX first ever hackathon - 2x @ETHGlobal finalist - Started 2nd year of uni 🇬🇧 Now shipping smart wallets at Base (If you build on @base say hi 😁)
Andrei De Stefani tweet media
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Greg Marlin
Greg Marlin@GregMarlin·
In the short term yeah you are 100% correct it doesn’t make any sense like most of crypto doesn’t make any sense. In the long term DA will be huge and there will be a few winners not just one. Hopefully a few of these early players stay around long enough to reap the rewards. It sucks to see early innovators get pushed out later by even more well-financed late comers when Valhalla finally arrives but that’s not to say it won’t happen. Unfortunately founders and community are both still feeling around in the dark as to perfect tokenomics and value accrual and there will be more mistakes than winners but I would suggest to give some grace to the people that tried hard to make it work in the dark.
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hantengri
hantengri@hantengri·
celestia raised $156m before launch it was marketed like it had just solved the mysteries of black holes in reality it is providing DA service to a bunch of dead chains might be the worst tokenomics you’ll ever see tokenomics were so bad that new projects literally started marketing “don’t worry, our locked tokens won’t be staked” as if that wasn’t supposed to be the default anyway staking tia was marketed as some magical endless airdrop opportunity but in reality it was just an exit liquidity trap engineered so vcs could dump their staking rewards forever an entire generation got wiped out for staking this thing at the top now a few clowns are still trying to market it as "all tokens are unlocked now" probably because they’re desperate to keep dumping their infinite inflation staking rewards somehow it still sits at $700m fdv zero
hantengri tweet media
hantengri@hantengri

eos raised $4.2b (yes, billion) “ethereum on steroids” promised to kill ethereum couldn’t even kill 1 tps cardano more like ethereum on sedatives even the people who launched the project abandoned ship early and pivoted to other things raising this much money and contributing absolutely nothing to crypto should qualify as some kind of world record recently they rebranded into something called “web3 banking” (whatever that’s supposed to mean) their so called web3 bank (lmfaoo) holds $300m tvl on a dex nobody on this planet has ever heard of i don’t know how that’s even possible probably just because $4b is such an absurd amount of money they still haven’t managed to burn through it the truth is most of that money ended up funding another project anyway i genuinely don't believe even bots are using this place their social accounts just rt crypto news and post ai slop they even got a coinbase delist recently yet somehow it’s still sitting at a $400m fdv zero

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Greg Marlin
Greg Marlin@GregMarlin·
If you looking for a job in software development easiest way to level up your skills and build your network that can lead to a job is hackathons (and you can win prizes). Some orgs to look at: @ethglobal @encodeclub @devpost
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Christopher Woggon
Christopher Woggon@chrissyinspace·
if you recognize this map we can be friends
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Greg Marlin
Greg Marlin@GregMarlin·
@Hi_Mrinal What do you love about Redis? Not a dis - I want to know.
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Mrinal
Mrinal@Hi_Mrinal·
I actually love building my side projects with go and redis and grpc
Mrinal tweet media
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Greg Marlin
Greg Marlin@GregMarlin·
@Hlogeon If you fear rejection and can’t handle challenging people impossible to do sales properly. If you can and are willing to learn about the product, its benefits etc then it’s fairly straightforward to be in at least top 20%. Tech at a high level requires endurance and smarts.
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Andrey Degtyaruk
Andrey Degtyaruk@Hlogeon·
@GregMarlin I think it’s the skill so it’s possible to learn, practice and improve. Just like coding but with people
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Greg Marlin
Greg Marlin@GregMarlin·
@ronawang DM me and I’ll give you my non X contact info - happy to help.
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Rona Wang
Rona Wang@ronawang·
@GregMarlin thank you! She’s not on X but I’ll pass the message along
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Rona Wang
Rona Wang@ronawang·
my friend was a software engineer, got laid off in 2022, couldn’t find a job for 3 years, & is now going back to school in a different field 😔 it’s tough out here
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Greg Marlin
Greg Marlin@GregMarlin·
@_trish_xD For me the only context is that whole full stack context. With AI you can bang it all out full cycle but I find the burnout after is intense.
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trish
trish@_trish_xD·
the hardest part of being a full-stack dev? context switching. backend → frontend → infra → database → deploy → fix css. it’s mental juggling at scale.
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Greg Marlin
Greg Marlin@GregMarlin·
@shl But point taken if I have to debug anything when installing your SDK your project ngmi
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Sahil Lavingia
Sahil Lavingia@shl·
The hardest part about being a developer is setting up your development environment
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Sai Krishna ⚡️ Superblog.ai
GENERATING REVENUE IS HARDER THAN DEVOPS AND FRONTEND AND BACKEND GENERATING REVENUE IS HARDER THAN DEVOPS AND FRONTEND AND BACKEND GENERATING REVENUE IS HARDER THAN DEVOPS AND FRONTEND AND BACKEND GENERATING REVENUE IS HARDER THAN DEVOPS AND FRONTEND AND BACKEND GENERATING REVENUE IS HARDER THAN DEVOPS AND FRONTEND AND BACKEND
Akash Singh@SkySingh04

DEVOPS IS HARDER THAN FRONTEND AND BACKEND DEVOPS IS HARDER THAN FRONTEND AND BACKEND DEVOPS IS HARDER THAN FRONTEND AND BACKEND DEVOPS IS HARDER THAN FRONTEND AND BACKEND DEVOPS IS HARDER THAN FRONTEND AND BACKEND

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Greg Marlin
Greg Marlin@GregMarlin·
@gdb FWIW ChatGPT 5.1 was a huge level up.
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