Jorteex

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Jorteex

Jorteex

@JorteexGG

Katılım Nisan 2016
91 Takip Edilen655 Takipçiler
Jorteex
Jorteex@JorteexGG·
You can now turn Claude Code, Codex and Cursor into something much closer to a real senior developer. And it’s fully open source. Superpowers has already crossed 94,000 GitHub stars. What it does: It makes the agent brainstorm before touching code. It enforces red/green TDD with no exceptions. It deletes code if there was no test first. It runs parallel subagents in isolated git worktrees. The difference is huge. Standard Claude Code jumps straight into implementation, debugs blindly and often skips tests. Claude Code with Superpowers follows a 7-phase flow: Brainstorm Spec Plan TDD Subagents Review Ship No code before passing tests. It works with Claude Code, Codex, Cursor, Gemini CLI, OpenCode and Copilot CLI. For larger projects, agents start hallucinating, breaking tests and adding dead code. Superpowers forces a senior engineering process and keeps context under control. You stop prompting blindly. Your agent starts working like a senior
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Jorteex
Jorteex@JorteexGG·
Claude for Small Business is way bigger than most people realize. Anthropic quietly shipped a workflow stack that already hit 382,000 downloads on launch day, and I put together a full breakdown of how the entire thing fits together. I organized all 31 skills by function and mapped the connector logic behind them. The guide includes: priority order for all 12 connectors permission setup for high sensitivity actions examples showing Business Pulse, Invoice Chase, and Job Post Builder in practice recommendations on which 5 skills to activate first Everything from hiring to finance to client ops is covered.
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Jorteex
Jorteex@JorteexGG·
CLARITY Act winners are pretty obvious. The bill clears the regulatory fog between the CFTC and SEC. That alone unlocks sectors that have been stuck for years. Polymarket gives it a 76% chance of passing in 2026. The biggest winner: real-world asset tokenisation. Tokenised treasuries. Private credit. On-chain securities. This is the framework serious capital has been waiting for. Pension funds, Apollo, and BlackRock do not move size into ambiguity. Then comes the infrastructure layer: oracles cross-chain interoperability compliance rails Once banks move on-chain, these become non-optional.
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Jorteex
Jorteex@JorteexGG·
Claude Code stops feeling vanilla once you add this. Anthropic quietly released an official plugin called claude-code-setup. And it changes the whole workflow. Instead of manually guessing what your project needs, it scans the repo and recommends: → hooks → skills → MCP servers → subagents → automations Then it walks you through the setup step by step. Most people are still using Claude Code out of the box. That is why it feels chaotic. The real upgrade is the ecosystem around it. Install: /plugin install claude-code-setup@claude-plugins-official
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Jorteex
Jorteex@JorteexGG·
@CryptoMichNL this rally hinges on yields and oil dropping, which isn't guaranteed.
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Michaël van de Poppe
Michaël van de Poppe@CryptoMichNL·
#Bitcoin doesn't look like it's going to crash from here. The reason for that is fairly simple: a crucial support holds. Yields have gone vertical, and oil has started to rally too. The moment both of them fall is when the indices will continue to rally, and #Bitcoin will bounce back. Technically speaking: - $75,000-76,000 remains to be a pivotal support zone for me. If that holds, we're likely going to see another rally towards the CME gap. - CME Gap at $79,100 remains valid to be tested and broken for resistance. Very likely, we'll see a strong upward breakout from there, which means the target zone of $86,000-90,000 is possible. - Oil & Yields go down = Ethereum goes back upwards = the entire crypto market is likely going to do well. It's a matter of time, however, given the high amount of liquidations earlier this week and solid price action since then, it doesn't shout for new lows. Most likely, we'll remain in a low-volatility phase for some weeks, during which Bitcoin acts range-bound, builds stamina, and breaks to the upside. In the meantime, if yields and oil prices come down, there's likely more volatility (and potential upside) in altcoins. Most upside in altcoins will come when Bitcoin breaks above $82K.
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Jorteex
Jorteex@JorteexGG·
This is the uncomfortable reality of the AI race: The best model does not win. The model people can reliably use wins. If users hit refusals, rate limits, overloaded servers, or “try again later” during real work, they stop caring about benchmark scores very quickly. Raw intelligence matters. But reliability is a feature. Latency is a feature. Context limits are a feature. Compute access is a feature. The history of tech is full of companies with superior technology that lost because they could not scale distribution or infrastructure fast enough. AI is becoming infrastructure now, not just research. And infrastructure businesses are judged on consistency, not demos.
shmidt@shmidtqq

x.com/i/article/2055…

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Jorteex
Jorteex@JorteexGG·
@DataChaz Big resources don't always mean fast shipping startups iterate while enterprises deliberate
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Jorteex
Jorteex@JorteexGG·
@kakashiii111 Ai deals never show the full picture the payment gap always surprises
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Jorteex
Jorteex@JorteexGG·
@rileybrown Steering feels better until you see the full responsibility queueing at least had clear boundaries
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Riley Brown
Riley Brown@rileybrown·
Going from queueing to steering is such an upgrade.
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Jorteex
Jorteex@JorteexGG·
@pmddomingos Fine-tuning nails the task then the world breaks it
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Pedro Domingos
Pedro Domingos@pmddomingos·
Post-training is a double-edged sword: it makes the model more suited to a task, but less connected to reality.
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Jorteex
Jorteex@JorteexGG·
@r0ck3t23 This tracks with what I see in dev teams Ambition scaling is the real test
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Dustin
Dustin@r0ck3t23·
Jensen Huang just killed every AI replacement narrative on contact. NVIDIA’s engineers use AI to write most of their code. The company is hiring more engineers than ever. Huang: “AI basically does most of our coding. And yet, we’re hiring more engineers than ever, we have more challenges than ever, we have bigger dreams than ever, our ambitions are greater than ever.” AI didn’t shrink NVIDIA’s workforce. It exposed how much ambition was trapped behind human bandwidth. The printing press didn’t produce fewer writers. The internet didn’t produce fewer publishers. No tool in history has permanently reduced demand for human effort. Because humans don’t use tools to do less. They use them to want more. Ambition is elastic. It expands to fill whatever capacity becomes available. Always has. Always will. Every economist forecasting mass displacement is measuring the wrong variable. They count the jobs that disappear. They never count the ambitions that take their place. Huang isn’t running a leaner company. He’s running a wider one. That gap will define who survives the next decade. Companies using AI to cut headcount will be destroyed by companies using AI to attempt what was never possible before. The machines aren’t coming for your job. They’re coming for your ceiling. Most people won’t know which one hit them.
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Jorteex
Jorteex@JorteexGG·
@GaryMarcus Rooting for Elon feels different now The trial makes it about character
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Jorteex
Jorteex@JorteexGG·
@GaryMarcus Glad oversight is back on the table implementation will be the messy part
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Gary Marcus
Gary Marcus@GaryMarcus·
Happy to see that The White House has finally realized that the Andreessen-Sacks zero regulation approach to AI was going to blow up in the their face. Also glad to see them finally consider the kind of oversight that I suggested in my 2023 Senate testimony.
Brian Schwartz@schwartzbWSJ

SCOOP: VP JD Vance held a secret call with CEOs of giant AI companies including Elon Musk, Dario Amodei and Sam Altman. Vance expressed concern with the potential of AI systems and impact they could have on local banks + other smaller businesses. It’s an instance of the administration scrambling to decide what to do with AI. Story w/ @AmrithRamkumar + @natalieandrews wsj.com/tech/ai/trump-…

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Jorteex
Jorteex@JorteexGG·
@ASvanevik That compression loss hides the real edge
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Alex Svanevik 🐧
Alex Svanevik 🐧@ASvanevik·
from an information theory POV, prediction markets are compression
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Jorteex
Jorteex@JorteexGG·
@GaryMarcus Ai security hype always peaks early real progress is quieter
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Gary Marcus
Gary Marcus@GaryMarcus·
My view on Mythos was and is somewhere in between. It’s real, it’s a wakeup call, and it’s not quite what some of the media coverage suggested. • Mythos is not going to allow an 8 year old to accidentally take down a power grid. (Someone writing for the NYT thought that was a real possibility). • The new Mozilla data certainly show that Mythos is better then its predecessors at detecting bugs. • But the UK AI institute’s study showed (and I still think this is true) that well-secured systems are not immediately at risk. • Consistent with all this the Mozilla report notes “Note that a number of these bugs are sandbox escapes, which would need to be combined with other exploits to achieve a full-chain Firefox compromise” I stand by my middle view; it’s not marketing hype, but it’s not quite as potent as some people thought. One other thing to note is that whatever advances there are not necessarily general to many or all domains; we will have to wait and see on that.
Ethan Mollick@emollick

So Mythos was, indeed, not marketing hype. Remember this is a general purpose model that just happens to be good at finding exploits because good models are good at lots of things. Expect similar from OpenAI & Google. And from open models in 8 months. hacks.mozilla.org/2026/05/behind…

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Jorteex
Jorteex@JorteexGG·
@Zeneca The house always wins eventually but gamers will chase the dopamine anyway
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Jorteex
Jorteex@JorteexGG·
@LarkDavis Capital flight always starts with taxes Other cities will welcome them
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Lark Davis
Lark Davis@LarkDavis·
What is happening to New York? Apollo Global Management is planning to build a second headquarters outside the city, as concerns grow over the deteriorating business climate and potential tax revenue losses. When will politicians and lawmakers learn? Unreasonable taxes inevitably lead to capital flight. You don't punish people for being successful, they'll simply move to the next city that treats them better.
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Gary Marcus
Gary Marcus@GaryMarcus·
Good summary of today, @katiemiller, but then again it is getting hard to track of the total number of ex-board members who have called Altman a liar 🤷‍♂️ Also hard to keep track how many OpenAI safety researchers have quit over safety!
Katie Miller@KatieMiller

1. An OpenAI safety researcher says she quit over safety 2. An ex-board member called Altman a liar 3. Musk's lawyers then called David Schizer to the stand to talk about nonprofit law. This may sound boring, but it's key to the case — and the professor of law at Columbia Law School did a good job, with the help of Musk's lawyer, of making it about Altman.

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Jorteex
Jorteex@JorteexGG·
@GaryMarcus Burn rate hype always looks good on paper builders feel the crunch first
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Gary Marcus
Gary Marcus@GaryMarcus·
Great news for the AI industry: market cap continues to be inversely correlated with burn rate! Why make a profit, when you can just forecast a glowing future?
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