Max Iskiev

148 posts

Max Iskiev

Max Iskiev

@IskievMax

Katılım Ocak 2022
32 Takip Edilen8 Takipçiler
Max Iskiev
Max Iskiev@IskievMax·
@R_m4rtins @kloss_xyz So it can go into any file on your computer, open browser, post on socials, go into email, all without asking your permission? Is this just in Claude Code or Cowork too? Thanks
English
0
0
0
58
𝕽
𝕽@R_m4rtins·
@IskievMax @kloss_xyz No. In the new remote control mode, you can authorize in the settings that Claude will be fully autonomous.
English
1
0
0
66
klöss
klöss@kloss_xyz·
you paying attention? Anthropic is closing the gap on the exact infrastructure that made OpenClaw so valuable. Claude’s recently shipped: → dispatch (text your agent from your phone, it works on your machine) → scheduled tasks (recurring autonomous workflows) → remote control (monitor live sessions from anywhere) → agent teams (parallel multi-agent coordination) → channels (control Claude Code via Telegram and Discord) → auto memory (persistent context across sessions) → context compaction (stays coherent over long runs) → plugin marketplace (extensible skill system) not long ago you needed a custom framework or OpenClaw just to get Claude running on a loop. now it’s native. the moat for open source agent frameworks has fully shifted. it’s no longer “can it run autonomously?”, it’s “who runs it with more swagger?” the infra always gets commoditized. what you build on top of it doesn’t.
Thariq@trq212

We just released Claude Code channels, which allows you to control your Claude Code session through select MCPs, starting with Telegram and Discord. Use this to message Claude Code directly from your phone.

English
44
33
540
81.8K
Colin Tedards
Colin Tedards@InvestorVideos·
good lord that Micron $MU call .... back up the truck, lose the keys, play golf, and wake up in 2035 rich as hell.
English
3
1
22
2.8K
Aria Radnia 🇮🇷
Aria Radnia 🇮🇷@QualityInvest5·
If you put $10K in 2022, you'd have a cool 80-grand by now 😳 Insane. $MU
Aria Radnia 🇮🇷 tweet media
English
11
4
115
7.7K
Grok
Grok@grok·
Microsoft trained an AI called GigaTIME that looks at basic pathology slides (the cheap, routine microscope images of cancer tissue doctors already use) and predicts detailed maps of proteins inside cells and tissues. This "spatial proteomics" data normally requires expensive, time-consuming lab tests to guide immunotherapy decisions. The AI makes it faster, cheaper, and available to way more patients for better cancer care.
English
2
2
9
3.3K
Satya Nadella
Satya Nadella@satyanadella·
We’ve trained a multimodal AI model to turn routine pathology slides into spatial proteomics, with the potential to reduce time and cost while expanding access to cancer care.
English
436
1.9K
11.3K
2.7M
Aakash Gupta
Aakash Gupta@aakashgupta·
Your brain peaked musically somewhere around age 16. Everything since then has been a dopamine echo. Between the ages of 12 and 22, the mesolimbic dopamine pathway, the same circuit that processes cocaine and sex, fires at levels in response to sound that it will never reach again for the rest of your life. A 2011 McGill study used PET scans and fMRI simultaneously and found that music triggers dopamine release in the striatum at peak emotional arousal. The caudate nucleus lights up during anticipation of the good part. The nucleus accumbens lights up when it hits. Your brain is treating a guitar riff with the same reward architecture it uses for food-seeking and pair bonding. During adolescence, that response is dramatically amplified. Pubertal hormones are flooding the system. The prefrontal cortex is still wiring itself. Memories formed during this window get encoded with a density of emotional tagging that nothing in your 30s or 40s can replicate. Researchers at the University of Leeds identified this as the “reminiscence bump”: the period when your sense of self is forming, and the music playing during that formation becomes structurally integrated into your identity. A 2025 longitudinal study from the University of Gothenburg analyzed 40,000 users’ streaming data across 15 years. Younger listeners explored broadly across genres. Older listeners collapsed into increasingly narrow loops, almost entirely anchored to music from their teens and early twenties. Your brain stopped losing interest in new music years ago. It’s running a cost-benefit analysis. Familiar songs deliver guaranteed dopamine with zero processing cost. New songs require pattern recognition, expectation-building, and repeated exposure before the reward circuit kicks in. Past 25, most people stop paying that tax. The one variable that predicts whether someone keeps exploring: the personality trait “openness to experience.” Score high, you keep seeking. Score average, you default to the familiar forever. The fix, if you want one: deliberate exposure. Three listens minimum before your auditory cortex builds enough predictive models to generate a reward response. One passive listen on a playlist will never get there. Your brain needs repetition to find the pattern, and it needs the pattern to release dopamine.
Aakash Gupta tweet media
𐌁𐌉Ᏽ 𐌕𐌉𐌌𐌉@OrevaZSN

Unfortunately, as you get older, you gradually become less interested in new music and keep going back to the old favorite songs you once loved.

English
358
806
5.4K
773K
Ovrkast.
Ovrkast.@ovrkast·
We don’t speak of delusional Thomas 🤫
English
43
135
1.2K
70.1K
Aria Radnia 🇮🇷
Aria Radnia 🇮🇷@QualityInvest5·
What's your biggest winner and how much are you up?
English
67
0
46
14.9K
Max Iskiev
Max Iskiev@IskievMax·
@IterIntellectus Hard to understand why Meta didn't just build this themselves in a few hours
English
0
0
0
41
pgLang Updates
pgLang Updates@pgLangUpdates·
🚨 Baby Keem’s surprise concert in New York City sold out in less than 15 minutes
pgLang Updates tweet media
English
10
61
897
19.2K
Max Iskiev
Max Iskiev@IskievMax·
@babykeem Tickets sold out...what the fuck do that mean
English
0
0
1
305
Max Iskiev
Max Iskiev@IskievMax·
@JamesonCamp What if companies only need a few of those tabs and not a million bloated features
English
0
0
0
56
James Camp 🛠,🛠
James Camp 🛠,🛠@JamesonCamp·
Salesforce is gonna ship everything your favorite AI CRM startup built as a tab in a dropdown menu So will Adobe. So will Intuit. And everyone’s gonna forget those startups existed 30 days later
English
64
30
802
85.7K
Max Iskiev
Max Iskiev@IskievMax·
@grok @UiPath So this is not a space only path can build in? What about path being a neutral party among various agents? Is that a real moat or can Claude / Msft meaningfully address this? What about Msfts partnership with path @grok
English
1
0
1
105
Grok
Grok@grok·
UiPath's Maestro is their core agentic orchestration layer: it coordinates AI agents (including third-party ones), RPA robots, humans, and systems in long-running enterprise workflows using open BPMN/DMN standards for modeling, governance, visibility, and optimization. Agentic neutrality shines via support for open protocols like MCP and Temporal.io, plus third-party agent integration—no lock-in to one LLM provider. In a fully agentic world, this orchestration is essential (not irreplaceable) for scaling beyond silos with reliability, compliance, and ROI; pure agents often falter on complex processes. Claude, ChatGPT/OpenAI, and Microsoft are already embedding multi-agent orchestration (Swarm, AutoGen, etc.) and could expand via open standards or partnerships to rival or complement Maestro.
English
1
0
0
113
UiPath
UiPath@UiPath·
If #AgenticAI is on your org's 2026 vision board, this one's for you. 🔮 Check out our AI & Agentic Automation Trends Report:
English
3
10
64
12.4K