Alonzo

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Alonzo

Alonzo

@ItsAllonzOver

“It’s not what you know, it’s what you can prove.”

Perth, Western Australia Katılım Aralık 2017
378 Takip Edilen703 Takipçiler
Davie Fogarty
Davie Fogarty@daviefogarty·
Claude Code > OpenClaw
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Alonzo
Alonzo@ItsAllonzOver·
most people setting up AI agents are doing memory wrong. they put everything in the system prompt. the agent reads it once, forgets context between sessions, and you get a dumb assistant that doesn't know what happened yesterday. here's the pattern that actually works: SOUL.md → who the agent is. voice, rules, personality. never changes session to session. AGENTS.md → how it operates. channel mappings, workflows, skill routing. the operating manual. MEMORY.md → curated long-term context. decisions made, things that matter. updated manually. memory/YYYY-MM-DD.md → raw daily log. what happened, what was discovered, what broke. the agent reads the first two on every session. the last two get fetched on demand when it actually needs past context. this is the difference between an agent that starts fresh every time and one that actually knows your business. the key insight: don't inject everything upfront. inject the identity files always. fetch the memory files only when the task needs them. static context = wasted tokens on-demand fetch = lean sessions that actually remember things one more thing most people miss: create a LESSONS.md per skill or domain. every time something breaks, goes wrong, or gets corrected, log it. agent reads the lessons before executing any task in that domain. it's not clever engineering. it's just good note-taking for a non-human brain. your agent can be sharp across months of work if you treat its memory architecture like an actual system and not an afterthought.
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Dakota Hermes
Dakota Hermes@dakotahermes·
claude + canva mcp is so OP it's insane used it to build 150+ static ads for a client today. the process: → upload existing winning ads → claude extracts the formula → generate 80+ copy variations by emotional angle → feed it a canva file with a template (duplicated for however many design ideas you have) → auto-populate the canva template with new copy → write paired ad platform copy for every image → compliance check against brand guide + lp → export a spreadsheet with headlines and copy for each ad then turned the whole thing into a skill file so my team can repeat it for every client and tested it perfectly on a call with the team. from concept to team ready in one chat session.
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nneelis
nneelis@NickNeelis·
@bradmillscan Does Anthropic allow openclaw through a subscription? Thought they banned that
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Brad Mills 🔑⚡️
Brad Mills 🔑⚡️@bradmillscan·
My weekly Opus 4.6 has reset After being forced to use ChatGPT for most of last week ... omg the difference between Opus and GPT is night & day. I can't stand working with a GPT powered claw. The personality is extremely triggering and it gets into stalled loops constantly.
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Alonzo
Alonzo@ItsAllonzOver·
Reddit is the most underrated distribution channel for ecommerce brands in 2026. Most founders haven't touched it. The ones who have are quietly building a moat. Here's the full playbook: 1. First, understand what Reddit actually is. It's not a forum. It's a search engine with a trust problem. When someone searches "best [product category]" — Reddit results rank on page 1. And unlike your product page, Reddit comments get trusted. 2. The research method most people skip: Search your product category on Reddit. Don't read the posts. Read the comments. Posts are curated. Comments are raw. You'll find: → Exact words customers use to describe their problem → Real objections to existing solutions → Why people bought or didn't buy That language belongs in your ads and your product pages. 3. The comment strategy that actually works: Post as a person, not a brand. Build an account with real history. 70% personal experience with the problem 20% how it got solved (mechanism, not marketing) 10% soft product mention — only when it fits naturally If it reads like an ad, it gets removed. If it reads like a person, it gets upvoted. 4. Thread selection is everything. Don't comment on general threads. Find threads where someone is asking for exactly what you sell. Too broad = wasted effort. Specific problem + specific thread = high-intent reader. One good thread beats 20 average ones. 5. The AI citation angle nobody is talking about: ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Claude scrape Reddit to answer product questions. When someone asks an AI for the best product in your category, it pulls from Reddit threads where real people gave real answers. Every comment you post today is training data for AI recommendations tomorrow. 6. The compounding effect: A Reddit comment doesn't expire. It ranks on Google. It gets scraped by AI. It gets upvoted for years. One good comment from 6 months ago is still generating recommendations you'll never see in your analytics. SEO takes months. Reddit SEO compounds forever. 7. The hard part isn't the strategy. It's the consistency. Post twice a day. Different threads. Different subreddits. Vary your timing. An account that posts at exactly the same time every day looks automated because it is. The accounts with real influence built it over months, not in a week.
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Salif Sibane
Salif Sibane@Salifsibane16·
Spoke with the founder last week in Dubai They're printing more than yall think
Nick Theriot@nicktheriot_

This brand is selling massage insoles with a 5-tier bundle structure and they're printing crazy money while everyone else is stuck selling one pair at a time. So I'm looking at this Stepprs massage insoles product page right now and I need to break down the offer because there's some really smart shit happening here that most ecommerce brands completely miss. 1. THE DREAM OUTCOME: What's the dream outcome here? Pain relief. Instant relief from foot pain, plantar fasciitis, arch pain, whatever. That's what people want when they're buying massage insoles. And they're calling it out right at the top with three checkmarks: ⦁ Instant Relief ⦁ Clinically Tested ⦁ Podiatrist Recommended Those three things are all increasing the perceived likelihood of achievement. "Clinically tested" and "podiatrist recommended" = proof this actually works. "Instant relief" = you're gonna get the outcome fast. That's textbook perceived likelihood of achievement. They're not just saying "these insoles feel good." Instead, they're stacking authority and proof. 2. THE PRICING STRUCTURE: Now here's where it gets interesting because most brands would just sell one pair for $27 and call it a day. But look at what they're doing: 1 Pair: $27 (Save $15) 2 Pairs: $22.95 each (Save $38.10) - MOST POPULAR 3 Pairs: $18.90 each (Save $69.30) 5 Pairs: $16.74 each (Save $126.30) - BEST VALUE This is bundling done right. They're giving you better unit economics the more you buy. And they're adding psychological nudges with "MOST POPULAR" and "BEST VALUE" badges to guide you toward the higher bundles. But here's the genius part - they're not just saying "buy more, save more." They're showing you the EXACT savings amount. "Save $126.30" on the 5-pair bundle. That's a big number. That creates a value gap in your mind where you're like "holy shit I'm leaving $126 on the table if I don't buy 5 pairs." 3. THE SCARCITY: Look at the top banner. It's rotating between: ⦁ SAVE UP TO 60% ⦁ SPRING SALE ⦁ OUR BIGGEST SALE EVER ⦁ OFFER ENDS SOON ⦁ FREE E-BOOK "Offer ends soon" = urgency. "Our biggest sale ever" = scarcity (this price won't be here forever). They're stacking these messages in a rotating banner so you're constantly getting hit with reasons to buy NOW. And then on the actual offer section it says "OFFER ENDS SOON" again right above the bundle options. They're not letting you forget that this is temporary. 4. THE BONUSES: Every bundle includes a FREE eBook. That's a bonus. It costs them nothing to deliver (it's digital) but it adds perceived value to the offer. And the eBook is probably about foot health or how to use the insoles or exercises or whatever. Doesn't matter what it is - it's a bonus that makes the offer feel more complete. 5. THE GUARANTEE: I don't see an explicit guarantee on this screenshot but I'd bet money they have one somewhere on the page. That's table stakes for ecommerce. But if they don't, they're leaving money on the table. Should be "60-day money-back guarantee" or "Try risk-free for 60 days" or something. 6. TIME DELAY: They're not calling this out explicitly but the product is massage insoles. You put them in your shoes and you get instant relief. The time delay is basically zero. That's built into the product itself. If I was them I'd make that even more explicit. "Relief in 60 seconds" or "Instant comfort the moment you step" or something. Really hammer home that there's no waiting period. 7. EFFORT AND SACRIFICE: What's the effort here? You put them in your shoes. That's it. Super low effort. They could call this out more. "No assembly required" or "Just slip them in and go" or whatever. The sacrifice? You're giving up your old shitty insoles that don't work. But they're not really calling that out either. Could be an angle. "Stop wasting money on insoles that don't work" or "Toss your old insoles that make your feet worse." 8. THE LESSON: This offer is doing a lot of things right. The bundle structure is smart. The scarcity and urgency are stacked. The social proof is massive. The savings are clear. But they're leaving money on the table by not hammering home the guarantee, the time delay and the low effort. If they fixed those things this offer could probably 2x its conversion rate overnight.

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Nick Theriot
Nick Theriot@nicktheriot_·
This brand is selling massage insoles with a 5-tier bundle structure and they're printing crazy money while everyone else is stuck selling one pair at a time. So I'm looking at this Stepprs massage insoles product page right now and I need to break down the offer because there's some really smart shit happening here that most ecommerce brands completely miss. 1. THE DREAM OUTCOME: What's the dream outcome here? Pain relief. Instant relief from foot pain, plantar fasciitis, arch pain, whatever. That's what people want when they're buying massage insoles. And they're calling it out right at the top with three checkmarks: ⦁ Instant Relief ⦁ Clinically Tested ⦁ Podiatrist Recommended Those three things are all increasing the perceived likelihood of achievement. "Clinically tested" and "podiatrist recommended" = proof this actually works. "Instant relief" = you're gonna get the outcome fast. That's textbook perceived likelihood of achievement. They're not just saying "these insoles feel good." Instead, they're stacking authority and proof. 2. THE PRICING STRUCTURE: Now here's where it gets interesting because most brands would just sell one pair for $27 and call it a day. But look at what they're doing: 1 Pair: $27 (Save $15) 2 Pairs: $22.95 each (Save $38.10) - MOST POPULAR 3 Pairs: $18.90 each (Save $69.30) 5 Pairs: $16.74 each (Save $126.30) - BEST VALUE This is bundling done right. They're giving you better unit economics the more you buy. And they're adding psychological nudges with "MOST POPULAR" and "BEST VALUE" badges to guide you toward the higher bundles. But here's the genius part - they're not just saying "buy more, save more." They're showing you the EXACT savings amount. "Save $126.30" on the 5-pair bundle. That's a big number. That creates a value gap in your mind where you're like "holy shit I'm leaving $126 on the table if I don't buy 5 pairs." 3. THE SCARCITY: Look at the top banner. It's rotating between: ⦁ SAVE UP TO 60% ⦁ SPRING SALE ⦁ OUR BIGGEST SALE EVER ⦁ OFFER ENDS SOON ⦁ FREE E-BOOK "Offer ends soon" = urgency. "Our biggest sale ever" = scarcity (this price won't be here forever). They're stacking these messages in a rotating banner so you're constantly getting hit with reasons to buy NOW. And then on the actual offer section it says "OFFER ENDS SOON" again right above the bundle options. They're not letting you forget that this is temporary. 4. THE BONUSES: Every bundle includes a FREE eBook. That's a bonus. It costs them nothing to deliver (it's digital) but it adds perceived value to the offer. And the eBook is probably about foot health or how to use the insoles or exercises or whatever. Doesn't matter what it is - it's a bonus that makes the offer feel more complete. 5. THE GUARANTEE: I don't see an explicit guarantee on this screenshot but I'd bet money they have one somewhere on the page. That's table stakes for ecommerce. But if they don't, they're leaving money on the table. Should be "60-day money-back guarantee" or "Try risk-free for 60 days" or something. 6. TIME DELAY: They're not calling this out explicitly but the product is massage insoles. You put them in your shoes and you get instant relief. The time delay is basically zero. That's built into the product itself. If I was them I'd make that even more explicit. "Relief in 60 seconds" or "Instant comfort the moment you step" or something. Really hammer home that there's no waiting period. 7. EFFORT AND SACRIFICE: What's the effort here? You put them in your shoes. That's it. Super low effort. They could call this out more. "No assembly required" or "Just slip them in and go" or whatever. The sacrifice? You're giving up your old shitty insoles that don't work. But they're not really calling that out either. Could be an angle. "Stop wasting money on insoles that don't work" or "Toss your old insoles that make your feet worse." 8. THE LESSON: This offer is doing a lot of things right. The bundle structure is smart. The scarcity and urgency are stacked. The social proof is massive. The savings are clear. But they're leaving money on the table by not hammering home the guarantee, the time delay and the low effort. If they fixed those things this offer could probably 2x its conversion rate overnight.
Nick Theriot tweet media
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shawn
shawn@shawn_pana·
this is insane. just toggle this button and any coding agent can use your browser > no more Chrome extensions > One button, connect Claude Code to your browser all you need is the right harness... try it with the Browser Use CLI right now!
Petr Baudis@xpasky

It took another two months but Chrome 146 is out since yesterday! And *that* means: with a single toggle, you can expose your current live browsing session via MCP and have your CLI agent do things in it. Aaand I have been waiting to deal with my LI connects until this moment.

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Alonzo
Alonzo@ItsAllonzOver·
@browser_use Latest openclaw version does this. Ouch. Lol
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oliverb
oliverb@oliverbrocato·
We raised $64M for this moment: Introducing Bustem. Bustem scans the internet to find and eliminate 100% of counterfeits RT + comment “SCAN” and I’ll send you a list of every scammer targeting your brand 🫵
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Max Sturtevant
Max Sturtevant@maxwellcopy·
This shit prints. But is it legal? Lol
Max Sturtevant tweet media
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Alonzo
Alonzo@ItsAllonzOver·
@simplifyinAI Missing a step. Ask OpenClaw to implement for you. Dont have to do a single thing
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Simplifying AI
Simplifying AI@simplifyinAI·
🚨 BREAKING: Someone just open-sourced a tool that optimizes your website for AI search engines. It’s called geo-seo-claude. It optimizes any website for AI search engines like ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Claude. → Runs full GEO audits with parallel subagents → Delivers 60-second visibility snapshots → Analyzes structured schema markup for LLMs → Exports complete PDF reports 100% Open-Source.
Simplifying AI tweet media
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Brad Mills 🔑⚡️
Brad Mills 🔑⚡️@bradmillscan·
I'm done with traditional session compaction with OpenClaw. I had 3 different sessions over the last 24 hours fail to compact that cost me about 4+ hours of tech support and bug reporting and config changing. I integrated lossless-claw today for the long DAG ... I set it to 30 days session. It was relatively painless. A couple gateway restarts, a little back and forth with claud co-work. Working smoothly so far!
Brad Mills 🔑⚡️@bradmillscan

You can now replace your OpenClaw Agent's aggressive compaction process with a DAG to supercharge it's memory! Remember DAG shitcoins in crypto? directed acyclic graph ... alternate architecture to bitcoin's blockchain ... they sacrifice decentralization and security for higher throughput. Finally, a DAG has a use for a Bitcoiner :) IOTA had the tangle with coordinators RaiBlocks/Nano was a block-lattice DAG Hashgraph used a gossip about gossip consensus with a permissioned governance council ByteBall/Obyte used a DAG with witness nodes. Strip the shitcoins and governance nonsense away and you have something that's actually useful for AI agent memory enhancement. I hacked a whole skill together (SoulKeep) for my agent to stay in a session as long as possible because usually you want your agent to have as much context as possible for as long as possible. Josh & team put the DAG to work brilliantly to replace the default compaction process with rolling summarization nodes as a novel way of holding as much valuable context as possible in the session for as long as possible. It also as some tools to trawl the session context, they call it "walking the DAG" using a bounded subagent to keep token costs down and performance up. With the latest openclaw release they allow for compaction plug ins like lossless claw. This isn't meant to be a replacement for QMD, your obsidian vault or any other extended long term memory / system of record enhancements your'e using. It's meant to be used in parallel with those strategies to help your agent have better context for longer. I'm seriously considering switching to this! losslesscontext.ai

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Alonzo retweetledi
OpenClaw🦞
OpenClaw🦞@openclaw·
OpenClaw 2026.3.8 🦞 🔒 ACP provenance — your agent finally knows who's talking to it 💾 openclaw backup — because YOLO deploys need a safety net 📱 Telegram dupes killed 🛡️ 12+ security fixes We fixed more things than we broke. Progress. github.com/openclaw/openc…
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Alonzo
Alonzo@ItsAllonzOver·
@onusoz Automatically determined from its own discernment of difficulty
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Alonzo
Alonzo@ItsAllonzOver·
@onusoz Hey. Is there a known way to load a model up based on task and context in the same session? Not one model per session and or channel
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Antoine Rousseaux
Antoine Rousseaux@AntoineRSX·
OpenClaw 3.7 dropped, and the feature nobody noticed: Each Telegram topic can now route to a dedicated agent with its own model. It's called Agent Client Protocol (ACP). For example: - Agent 1 for daily tasks on Kimi - Agent 2 for coding on Opus 4.6 - Agent 3 for social media on Grok.
Antoine Rousseaux tweet media
OpenClaw🦞@openclaw

OpenClaw 2026.3.7 🦞 ⚡ GPT-5.4 + Gemini 3.1 Flash-Lite 🤖 ACP bindings survive restarts 🐳 Slim Docker multi-stage builds 🔐 SecretRef for gateway auth 🔌 Pluggable context engines 📸 HEIF image support 💬 Zalo channel fixes We don't do small releases. github.com/openclaw/openc…

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