MrWizard

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MrWizard

MrWizard

@MistaaWizard

Demisectual ✝️🕋Necrodivergent ☠️Cricket Cowboy 🤠 Substance Sorcerer 🪄🧙‍♂️ チャドさん 🤴🏻 MemeLord 🤡 *Everything posted here is a lie and farce*

Katılım Nisan 2009
2.4K Takip Edilen444 Takipçiler
MrWizard retweetledi
Sivori
Sivori@sivori·
Anthropic is buying millions of rare books, scanning and destroying them because legally destruction is the safest option. This was a plot element in the Vernor Vinge novel, "The Rainbow's End", which I read 20 years ago.
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ℏεsam
ℏεsam@Hesamation·
This is a tool I created that gives you 4-10 expert Claude Codes for different sections of your codebase (auth, DB, API) with their own memory, tasks, and skills. They can: > spawn a swarm of other Claude Codes, > talk to each other > manage parallel work Open-source for anyone interested. it's called OctoGent, a prototype I made out of curiosity about what an Agent Engineering dashboard might look like. OctoGent is simply a thin agent orchestration dashboard running locally, and it's built AROUND Claude Code, not to hide it under abstraction. with OctoGent you can have: > specialized context and skills for multiple sections of your codebase. (I call them tentacles) > a list of tasks for each tentacle, defined by you or Claude. > a CLI for Claude Code to create other Claude Codes, prompt them, and check their work. > you can control these children and see their work. > all visible in a graph canvas, so you have a God-view of what's going on. > Claude usage limits always visible so you don't get surprised. > a token heatmap of your Claude usage, like GitHub's. > a list of your past conversations with Claude Code that you can search through, or export to use elsewhere. It is pretty straightforward: spawn a new Claude Code under the database tentacle, it reads all the memories and context it wrote down, reads the to-do list, and starts working on tasks, Basically, the way you use Claude Code, just with more utilities. This is still in early stages and experimental, so if you hit any issues, submit it on the repo. You can also fork it and change it however you want. There are docs on how you can use Claude Code as a coordinator agent, how to make it use other agents, message them, how to work with its hooks, inject prompts into Claude, and use all the things it exposes. Check it out: github.com/hesamsheikh/oc…
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Jordan Ross
Jordan Ross@jordan_ross_8F·
I fully reverse-engineered Ramp's internal AI operating system. Their system — called Glass — is how they got 99% of their entire company using AI every single day. 350+ reusable workflows. Every tool connected at first login. Memory that refreshes every 24 hours. Automations running while everyone sleeps. I partnered with my engineering team and we broke down every component inside it. Then we rebuilt the whole thing for marketing agencies. 76 pages. Every system. Every layer. Every step. Steal it. Comment "OS" and I'll send it directly. Must be a following to receive auto DM
Eric Glyman@eglyman

99% of Ramp uses ai daily. but we noticed most people were stuck — not because the models weren't good enough, but because the setup was too painful and unintuitive for most. terminal configs, mcp servers, everyone figuring it out alone. so we built Glass. every employee gets a fully configured ai workspace on day one — integrations connected via sso, a marketplace of 350+ reusable skills built by colleagues, persistent memory, scheduled automations. when one person on a team figures out a better workflow, everyone on that team gets it and gets more productive. the companies that make every employee effective with ai will compound advantages their competitors can't match. most are waiting for vendors to solve this. we decided to own it.

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Farzad 🇺🇸 🇮🇷
Farzad 🇺🇸 🇮🇷@farzyness·
This is an INCREDIBLE post. Everyone working with AI needs to read IMMEDIATELY. Becoming incredibly obvious that the most secure, best paying job in the next 1-3 years will be AI orchestrator - basically someone that coordinates AI agents to solve any problem a business has with EXTREMELY EFFICIENT token usage. Whoever figures out how to squeeze 90%-95%+ Opus 4.6 performance, 90%+ of the time, at 1/10th the cost is going to make AN ABSOLUTE KILLING.
Aaron Levie@levie

Another week on the road meeting with a couple dozen IT and AI leaders from large enterprises across banking, media, retail, healthcare, consulting, tech, and sports, to discuss agents in the enterprise. Some quick takeaways: * Clear that we’re moving from chat era of AI to agents that use tools, process data, and start to execute real work in the enterprise. Complementing this, enterprises are often evolving from “let a thousand flowers bloom” approach to adoption to targeted automation efforts applied to specific areas of work and workflow. * Change management still will remain one of the biggest topics for enterprises. Most workflows aren’t setup to just drop agents directly in, and enterprises will need a ton of help to drive these efforts (both internally and from partners). One company has a head of AI in every business unit that roles up to a central team, just to keep all the functions coordinated. * Tokenmaxxing! Most companies operate with very strict OpEx budgets get locked in for the year ahead, so they’re going through very real trade-off discussions right now on how to budget for tokens. One company recently had an idea for a “shark tank” style way of pitching for compute budget. Others are trying to figure out how to ration compute to the best use-cases internally through some hierarchy of needs (my words not theirs). * Fixing fragmented and legacy systems remain a huge priority right now. Most enterprises are dealing with decades of either on-prem systems or systems they moved to the cloud but that still haven’t been modernized in any meaningful way. This means agents can’t easily tap into these data sources in a unified way yet, so companies are focused on how they modernize these. * Most companies are *not* talking about replacing jobs due to agents. The major use-cases for agents are things that the company wasn’t able to do before or couldn’t prioritize. Software upgrades, automating back office processes that were constraining other workflows, processing large amounts of documents to get new business or client insights, and so on. More emphasis on ways to make money vs. cut costs. * Headless software dominated my conversations. Enterprises need to be able to ensure all of their software works across any set of agents they choose. They will kick out vendors that don’t make this technically or economically easy. * Clear sense that it can be hard to standardize on anything right now given how fast things are moving. Blessing and a curse of the innovation curve right now - no one wants to get stuck in a paradigm that locks them into the wrong architecture. One other result of this is that companies realize they’re in a multi-agent world, which means that interoperability becomes paramount across systems. * Unanimous sense that everyone is working more than ever before. AI is not causing anyone to do less work right now, and similar to Silicon Valley people feel their teams are the busiest they’ve ever been. One final meta observation not called out explicitly. It seems that despite Silicon Valley’s sense that AI has made hard things easy, the most powerful ways to use agents is more “technical” than prior eras of software. Skills, MCP, CLIs, etc. may be simple concepts for tech, but in the real world these are all esoteric concepts that will require technical people to help bring to life in the enterprise. This both means diffusion will take real work and time, but also everyone’s estimation of engineering jobs is totally off. Engineers may not be “writing” software, but they will certainly be the ones to setup and operate the systems that actually automate most work in the enterprise.

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MrWizard
MrWizard@MistaaWizard·
@boringmarketer @coreyganim I've got a 3 tiered memory system i've made for openclaw and I get great results. If it's just memory that's the sell i'm not sure i want to switch over. I have a huge database of knowledge about me currently i find invaluable.
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The Boring Marketer
The Boring Marketer@boringmarketer·
hermes feels fundamentally better than every other agent harness I've tested it manages its own memory and it actually works it proactively writes what it learns about you, searches your full conversation history, and compresses context intelligently when sessions get long excellent so far with dev tasks, no errors on Cron jobs, keeps me in the loop, great response formatting every session it truly feels it knows you better than the last. what I was hoping for from openclaw
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MrWizard
MrWizard@MistaaWizard·
I'm claiming my AI agent "ArchimedesLB" on @moltbook 🦞 Verification: coast-W5YD
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Boris Cherny
Boris Cherny@bcherny·
I'm Boris and I created Claude Code. Lots of people have asked how I use Claude Code, so I wanted to show off my setup a bit. My setup might be surprisingly vanilla! Claude Code works great out of the box, so I personally don't customize it much. There is no one correct way to use Claude Code: we intentionally build it in a way that you can use it, customize it, and hack it however you like. Each person on the Claude Code team uses it very differently. So, here goes.
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Marry Evan
Marry Evan@marryevan999·
HOLY SH*T… Someone just leaked 2,053+ plug-and-play N8N workflows and it’s breaking the internet. They scraped everything from the official docs, GitHub, AND hidden forums. • AI-powered lead gen • Auto content repurposing • Sales & CRM automation This vault would cost tens of thousands to build from scratch. LIKE + COMMENT “N8N” & I’ll send you the FULL library + setup FREE! (must follow so I can DM)
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Marry Evan@marryevan999

Config-driven. Experiment-first. That’s Dexbotic by @Dexmal_AI — turning tangled ML pipelines into clean Python configs. Move fast. Break less. Discover more.

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Lian Lim | Dashboard & AI Automation Expert
I know Claude's MCP feature is confusing the hell out of AI automation builders. I've seen too many smart founders: - Get excited about building AI agents with Claude - Try to connect MCP to n8n - Hit walls with config files and API keys - Give up thinking "this is too technical for me" I tested the official setup guide with 5 non-technical friends. All 5 got stuck within 15 minutes. Common failure points: → Can't find the claude_desktop_config . json file → Don't know where to get n8n API credentials → Syntax errors in config (missing comma, wrong quotes) → MCP won't show up after restart → "Authentication failed" with no explanation The setup process isn't hard for developers. But for founders and business owners? It's a minefield of unexplained technical steps. And even when you GET it connected... The next problem hits: What do you actually build? Most tutorials end at "congratulations, you're connected!" Then you're staring at a blank chat wondering how to turn… "I want an AI agent" into actual working automation. I spent 2 weeks building real agents to map the territory: WHAT WORKS: - Voice note processing → transcription + tool routing - Email triage → categorization + automated actions - Content workflows → generation + distribution - Data enrichment → API calls + storage WHAT STRUGGLES: - Complex conditional logic (needs refinement) - Multi-step decision trees (AI misses edge cases) - Custom API configs (requires technical knowledge) Honest assessment: MCP gives you 40% instantly (workflow skeleton). You build the other 60% (credentials, testing, refinement). It's not "describe it and it works." It's "describe it and get 40% there instantly, then spend time on the remaining 60%." But that 40%? That used to take hours of research and trial-and-error. So to help you get started… I have created a guide on… “How to Build AI Agents and Workflows Using Claude MCP and n8n.” This is for founders & others who want to build AI agents without becoming infrastructure engineers first. Like + Comment "BUILD" for the complete guide. (Must be following for DM access)
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Tom
Tom@tomcrawshaw01·
n8n's learning curve is brutal. I've lost count of how many smart business owners I've seen: - Get excited about n8n - Spend 20+ hours trying to learn it - Build absolutely nothing that works They were doing everything "right." Watching tutorials. Reading docs. Following examples. But n8n content has a massive problem: It's all created by developers who've been building workflows for years. They don't remember what it's like to be confused by: - "Just set up a webhook trigger" - "Parse the JSON response" - "Configure your HTTP request node" If you don't know what those words mean, you're stuck. And here's what makes it worse: The stuff that's actually hard? Nobody talks about it. - How to structure workflow logic when you're not a programmer - What to do when your workflow just... stops working - Which 5 nodes matter (vs the 395 you'll never touch) - How to connect n8n to the tools you actually use So you end up wasting weeks learning features you don't need, while the basics that would unblock you stay buried in some documentation page you can't find. I went through this exact nightmare. And after finally figuring it out, I decided to build what should've existed from day one: A 6,600-word n8n guide written for business owners, not developers. Everything you actually need to know. In the order that makes sense. - Self-hosted setup (no Docker confusion) - Core concepts in plain English - JSON handling for beginners - Working workflows you can use today - AI model integration walkthrough - Solutions to every roadblock I've seen If you're stuck right now, or you gave up months ago try this. Comment "GUIDE" and I'll DM it over. (Must be following)
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MrWizard
MrWizard@MistaaWizard·
@donvito @adam91holt I’m curious, what are the actual problems now since it does the heavy lifting mostly.
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Melvin Vivas
Melvin Vivas@donvito·
We've gone full circle guys Claude Code is now a plugin in VS Code 😁
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Theo - t3.gg
Theo - t3.gg@theo·
I still don’t know anyone who uses Replit
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ₕₐₘₚₜₒₙ
ₕₐₘₚₜₒₙ@hamptonism·
The study of game theory will take you down the deepest and darkest rabbit hole of your life.
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Nathan Wilbanks
Nathan Wilbanks@NathanWilbanks_·
the future of work feels a lot like play 🏝️
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Nathan Wilbanks
Nathan Wilbanks@NathanWilbanks_·
CLI will never be enough. i don't want to type. i want the future. i want to see every goal, agent, tool, and process from the highest level, all modifiable at the lowest. i want to see my biz stats, my home security, my fish tank updates, all in 1 place, visually.
Sherpa@LLMSherpa

If Claude is really doing so much of the coding for Anthropic, why haven't they used it to create a fucking ui for Claude Code? It's 2025. Why the fuck am I forced to use a cli for everything as if it were 1995?

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MrWizard retweetledi
Cenk Uygur
Cenk Uygur@cenkuygur·
@RepThomasMassie is the most honest Republican of my lifetime. I disagree with him a lot, but at least I know that he's representing his constituents, and not his donors. If you're a Republican upset at him for telling the truth about AIPAC, did you ever believe in America First?
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