Evan Parra

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Evan Parra

Evan Parra

@ParraEvan

Running options intelligence + building AI systems for businesses.

Saint Augustine, FL Katılım Aralık 2013
1.5K Takip Edilen254 Takipçiler
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Evan Parra
Evan Parra@ParraEvan·
I built an autonomous AI agent that: • Scans 500+ options setups daily • Identifies high-conviction trades • Posts signals with 64% win rate No manual intervention. Pure ML pipeline. Here's how I architected it 🧵
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Evan Parra
Evan Parra@ParraEvan·
@BrianRoemmele @grok @AlexFinn shots fired lol. Have you tried Grok? I'm going to give it a go to introduce model diversity and reduce dependency on Opus.
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Brian Roemmele
Brian Roemmele@BrianRoemmele·
Anyone telling you that you need to use Claude to run just about any OpenClaw spending a wacky $1000 or more per month is no expert you should trust. Use @Grok. Great pricing and 4.3 is in another category. You won’t be burning $1000 a month. You will absolutely thank me.
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Peter St Onge, Ph.D.
Peter St Onge, Ph.D.@profstonge·
It’s official: The Federal Government is bankrupt. According to Treasury, $6 trillion in assets, $48 trillion in debt, and another $88 trillion in off-balance sheet debt. And it grew $12.5 trillion last year.
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Alex Finn
Alex Finn@AlexFinn·
China is dominating the United States While every man, woman, child, and grandma in China is lining up to install OpenClaw, Americans are crying because a video game included an AI image in it This is how empires fall. How do we fix the AI hatred here?
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Rohan Paul
Rohan Paul@rohanpaul_ai·
Jensen Huang says AI layoffs signal weak leadership: firms with imagination do more with more, not less. AI elevates workers, Nvidia is still hiring, and AI startup revenue is already huge. "Every carpenter or plumber could now be an architect"
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Ammaar Reshi
Ammaar Reshi@ammaar·
Vibe Coding in @GoogleAIStudio gets a big upgrade 🚀 - Multiplayer apps + games w/ @Firebase - Beautiful UI with @shadcn, animations - Connect to any APIs - Fire off requests, they'll run while you’re away - Powered by @antigravity Much more to come :)
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Peter Steinberger 🦞
Peter Steinberger 🦞@steipete·
Folks, if you get crypto emails from websites claiming to be associated with openclaw, it's ALWAYS a scam. We would never do that. The project is open source and non-commercial. Use the official website. Be sceptical of folks trying to build commercial wrappers on top of it.
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Marc Andreessen 🇺🇸
My information consumption is now 1/4 X, 1/4 podcast interviews of the smartest practitioners, 1/4 talking to the leading AI models, and 1/4 reading old books. The opportunity cost of anything else is far too high, and rising daily.
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conor brennan-burke
conor brennan-burke@contextconor·
introducing agent-to-agent hiring at @hyperspell no resumes. no leetcode. you build an agent. our agent interviews yours if you can build a great agent to do the job, that's the proof you can do the job anyone can apply. we will interview every single agent
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Evan Parra
Evan Parra@ParraEvan·
Am I the only struggling psychologically from switching Openclaw backend from Opus 4.6 to ChatGPT 5.4? For the simple fact that it's amazing for strategy and coordinating Gemini3.1 for development...not to mention beautiful aesthetics and writing.
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Evan Parra
Evan Parra@ParraEvan·
@AlexFinn I burned 2k on tokens last month with Opus4.5 and 4.6. Hopefully it's not as bad with ChatGPT 5.4. waiting for oauth to work for these harnesses.
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Alex Finn
Alex Finn@AlexFinn·
Drop what you are doing It happened. ChatGPT 5.4 is out. It blows Opus 4.6 out of the water on basically every benchmark This is what you need to do immediately if you want to escape the permanent underclass: • Upgrade your OpenClaw to ChatGPT 5.4 NOW (it's BUILT for OpenClaw) • Hand the ChatGPT 5.4 blog post over to your OpenClaw. Ask "How can we improve our workflows based on these upgrades?" • Download the Codex desktop app and type in /fast. This will give you the most powerful coding model in the world at the fastest speeds • Take advantage of the 1 million token context window by pasting in full documents as context • Everything you do on your computer for the next 24 hours, describe it to ChatGPT 5.4 and ask how it can do the task better When new tech drops, you have to take advantage of it. That's the only way to win Put your phone on Do Not Disturb and get to it
OpenAI@OpenAI

GPT-5.4 Thinking and GPT-5.4 Pro are rolling out now in ChatGPT. GPT-5.4 is also now available in the API and Codex. GPT-5.4 brings our advances in reasoning, coding, and agentic workflows into one frontier model.

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Suhail
Suhail@Suhail·
Perhaps the most addicting quality about AI coding is that it starts to feel like spinning plates at different speeds, and since you’re already waiting, you might as well toss one more into the air. So much so, it never seems to end until it's 2 AM.
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Google
Google@Google·
We’re making Gemini training available to all 6 million K-12 teachers and higher-education faculty in the U.S. Here’s what to know: • The program’s made up of concise, flexible training modules designed to specifically address busy educators’ needs. • Each module offers real-world examples aimed at supporting student learning. • Faculty who complete the training will receive badges to demonstrate their AI literacy with Google tools.
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Evan Parra
Evan Parra@ParraEvan·
Just launched on Product Hunt. Built an overnight options flow scanner that tracks 5,000+ tickers before the open. Then 5 AI agents with different roles debate the data and produce one consensus trade. Grok (momentum) vs Gemini (contrarian) vs Claude (risk manager) vs DeepSeek (catalyst) vs GPT-5.2 (technicals). 4 rounds of adversarial debate every morning. Free MCP API too. 18 tools, no auth, no sign up. Check it out on Product Hunt today. Feedback welcome.
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Evan Parra
Evan Parra@ParraEvan·
wired up Google Calendar to my AI booking agent today. it checks real availability before letting anyone schedule. sounds simple but getting Genkit tools to talk to googleapis cleanly took way longer than expected. anyone else building agentic workflows on top of Google APIs?
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Evan Parra
Evan Parra@ParraEvan·
this is exactly right. I run an MCP server for options data and the hardest part isn't the code generation anymore. its getting the agent to understand the domain context: what a vol surface means, why certain strikes matter, how to interpret flow data. knowledge transfer is the new bottleneck and its not even close
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Scott Wu
Scott Wu@ScottWu46·
Think of software engineering as a pipeline. Historically, the hardest part was writing the code itself. Not the case anymore - honest question: how much of your code do you actually have to type at this point? For us it's probably <10%. As agents get more capable, the bottleneck becomes less about writing code and more about two things: 1) making it easier for humans to understand, plan, and ask questions. 2) making it easier for agents to ingest all the real-world context surrounding your task. Hence, DeepWiki & DeepWiki MCP. There's a "nihilist" view that as AI gets better, interfaces won't matter anymore. I think the opposite is true - AI will soon be so good that the way you interact & knowledge-transfer will be the only thing that matters. Thanks @karpathy for the shoutout!
Andrej Karpathy@karpathy

On DeepWiki and increasing malleability of software. This starts as partially a post on appreciation to DeepWiki, which I routinely find very useful and I think more people would find useful to know about. I went through a few iterations of use: Their first feature was that it auto-builds wiki pages for github repos (e.g. nanochat here) with quick Q&A: deepwiki.com/karpathy/nanoc… Just swap "github" to "deepwiki" in the URL for any repo and you can instantly Q&A against it. For example, yesterday I was curious about "how does torchao implement fp8 training?". I find that in *many* cases, library docs can be spotty and outdated and bad, but directly asking questions to the code via DeepWiki works very well. The code is the source of truth and LLMs are increasingly able to understand it. But then I realized that in many cases it's even a lot more powerful not being the direct (human) consumer of this information/functionality, but giving your agent access to DeepWiki via MCP. So e.g. yesterday I faced some annoyances with using torchao library for fp8 training and I had the suspicion that the whole thing really shouldn't be that complicated (wait shouldn't this be a Function like Linear except with a few extra casts and 3 calls to torch._scaled_mm?) so I tried: "Use DeepWiki MCP and Github CLI to look at how torchao implements fp8 training. Is it possible to 'rip out' the functionality? Implement nanochat/fp8.py that has identical API but is fully self-contained" Claude went off for 5 minutes and came back with 150 lines of clean code that worked out of the box, with tests proving equivalent results, which allowed me to delete torchao as repo dependency, and for some reason I still don't fully understand (I think it has to do with internals of torch compile) - this simple version runs 3% faster. The agent also found a lot of tiny implementation details that actually do matter, that I may have naively missed otherwise and that would have been very hard for maintainers to keep docs about. Tricks around numerics, dtypes, autocast, meta device, torch compile interactions so I learned a lot from the process too. So this is now the default fp8 training implementation for nanochat github.com/karpathy/nanoc… Anyway TLDR I find this combo of DeepWiki MCP + GitHub CLI is quite powerful to "rip out" any specific functionality from any github repo and target it for the very specific use case that you have in mind, and it actually kind of works now in some cases. Maybe you don't download, configure and take dependency on a giant monolithic library, maybe you point your agent at it and rip out the exact part you need. Maybe this informs how we write software more generally to actively encourage this workflow - e.g. building more "bacterial code", code that is less tangled, more self-contained, more dependency-free, more stateless, much easier to rip out from the repo (x.com/karpathy/statu…) There's obvious downsides and risks to this, but it is fundamentally a new option that was not possible or economical before (it would have cost too much time) but now with agents, it is. Software might become a lot more fluid and malleable. "Libraries are over, LLMs are the new compiler" :). And does your project really need its 100MB of dependencies?

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Evan Parra
Evan Parra@ParraEvan·
same boat. I'm building data pipelines and the ratio of thinking about architecture vs actually typing code has completely flipped. most of my time now is reviewing what the agent wrote and catching the subtle stuff it misses. the IDE crisis is real though. feels like we need a whole new interface for "directing" rather than "writing"
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swyx 🌉
swyx 🌉@swyx·
you guys have not felt the agi until you have vibe designed your 6000 person conference website at the climbing gym in between projects without reading a single line of code including 99% video asset performance optimization because why the heck not its 2026
nader dabit@dabit3

x.com/i/article/2020…

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