Liam Harlow (🍁+US citizen)
38.8K posts

Liam Harlow (🍁+US citizen)
@Xman628797
I’m creating political songs and videos. I really need more followers. 😀 My YouTube Channel https://t.co/JmqudvS3PI






GPT-5.5 is impressive, but it has destroyed the value of the $20 tier. Before the $100 plan, Plus was the most valuable subscription available. Now, with the new tier and GPT-5.5, the $20 plan works much like Claude’s $20 subscription. And it is unbearable.


GPT-5.5 just dropped TL;DR: This is another o1 / o3 moment - Shorter, more human, actual personality - Clearly pushing into personal agents (OpenClaw) - Higher info / Token density → Cheaper to reach GPT-5.4-level intelligence It codes different: - Less bloat - Cleaner, readable output Codex: - Frontier agentic coding - Backend > Claude Opus 4.6 - Give it specs and it will build it - Handles large codebases, long runs, visual iteration loops GPT-5.5 Pro: - Does 30-90 min runs cohesively like it’s nothing - Writes full docs, uses tools well - Can solve basically anything Tradeoffs: - Slower than Opus - More expensive per token - (but more efficient overall) GPT-5.5 is the new bar








The headline says that the costs of Trump’s tantrums are “starting to show”. I don’t think Americans get that for Europeans, the Greenland debacle changed everything. It’s over. No one can trust the US. It’s not because of Trump. It’s because we know your system can’t/ won’t stop him or the next guy after him. And also that there’s enough of you who think it would be ‘cool’ to invade just to rub it in our faces. That’s a good enough reason to never trust you again and make everything far more transactional.


In the United States, President Trump’s periodic insults hurled toward allies get treated as routine tantrums. But in those countries, the accumulation of abuse has reached a tipping point. My latest column: washingtonpost.com/opinions/2026/…







Yesterday I drove my @tesla 900 miles on FSD from Miami to Nashville and I realized it’s genuinely the better option. I fly that route 2 to 3 times a month. Flights are never under $400. Most times $600. Sometimes $800. Add Uber to and from both airports, or parking garage fees. Then factor in the delays, the cancellations, the security theater, the chaos, the guy next to you who hasn’t met deodorant yet. On the other hand: I pack healthy snacks, press one button, and the car just goes. I took calls. Replied to emails. FaceTimed my family. Ate without pulling over. Did everything I normally do on a travel day, except none of the stuff that makes travel days miserable. My biggest concern going in was range and charging. Here’s what actually happened: My bladder needed one extra stop the car didn’t even suggest. Most charging stops were under five minutes. Total cost for the whole trip was less than just the uber to the airport. And this was the base model Y. Now I’m thinking I should get something comfier and just make this the default.

"The share of U.S.-bound Canadian travellers heading to Florida increased. 'Florida’s market share of Canadian travellers to the U.S. was 16.8%. In 2025 it was 19.8%. It went up.' Why? 'Because Florida is that reliably fun destination,' said @BryanDGriffin. Of course return visits to Florida are 'very popular' with Canadians. Plenty of new-to-Florida travellers are arriving from Canada too. Whether vacationers are first-timers or perennial visitors, @VISITFLORIDA is focused on showcasing ‘the new in the known,’ combing iconic highlights with unexpected discoveries."

"The share of U.S.-bound Canadian travellers heading to Florida increased. 'Florida’s market share of Canadian travellers to the U.S. was 16.8%. In 2025 it was 19.8%. It went up.' Why? 'Because Florida is that reliably fun destination,' said @BryanDGriffin. Of course return visits to Florida are 'very popular' with Canadians. Plenty of new-to-Florida travellers are arriving from Canada too. Whether vacationers are first-timers or perennial visitors, @VISITFLORIDA is focused on showcasing ‘the new in the known,’ combing iconic highlights with unexpected discoveries."













