Colton Sims
307 posts


I'm giving away the Claude Code skills we use to manage $300k/mo in ad spend at ColdIQ.
4X ROAS on $1M+ spent.
Ivan, our head of growth, built them off 300+ hours running ad campaigns for our clients. They run Google, Meta, and LinkedIn ads from the terminal in plain English:
→ bulk edits across platforms
→ custom audiences from CRM lists
→ creative fatigue detection before CTR dips
→ bid adjustments at scale
→ performance audits across periods
Reply "ads" and I'll send the full repo. Must be following.

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I have massively scaled back my OpenClaw usage and this was one of the last things keeping me on there
Claude@claudeai
Memory on Claude Managed Agents is now in public beta. Your agents can now learn from every session, using an intelligence-optimized memory layer that balances performance with flexibility.
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@Rin_Vixen Well conservatism emphasizes small, limited government which aligns with OP. Modern “rightism” however, idk
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凄すぎて逆に「これもうJRの研修センターに置いてあっても違和感ない説」なの流石にエグい。 x.com/BuretseGato01/…
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@mreflow GPT with OAuth is very very good for the usage you get. I have found that Haiku is sufficient for many things if I need to use Claude
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For those using OpenClaw at a high level, what’s your favorite default model? I was using Nemotron 3-super locally on my Spark but it hits context limits too quickly. I’m mostly using Sonnet-4.6 now but API costs rack up fast. I love my claw but honestly haven’t optimized models and model switching as much as I should.
I like the bigger context windows when building out new skills and automations so it doesn’t forget what we’re building but that’s also when API costs soar. I like my local models because I have a Spark for that reason but context windows aren’t great on the local models I’ve tried…
Looking for advice from some more experienced OpenClawers.
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@toddsaunders Wow. Currently working in the same industry and making adjacent applications - this project was on my backlog but now I don’t have to build it. This will be a huuge time saver
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I know Silicon Valley startups don't want to hear this.....
But the combination of someone in the trades with deep domain expertise and Claude Code will run circles around your generic software.
I talked to Cory LaChance this morning, a mechanical engineer in industrial piping construction in Houston. He normally works with chemical plants and refineries, but now he also works with the terminal
He reached out in a DM a few days ago and I was so fired up by his story, I asked him if we could record the conversation and share it.
He built a full application that industrial contractors are using every day. It reads piping isometric drawings and automatically extracts every weld count, every material spec, every commodity code.
Work that took 10 minutes per drawing now takes 60 seconds. It can do 100 drawings in five minutes, saving days of time.
His co-workers are all mind blown, and when he talks to them, it's like they are speaking different languages.
His fabrication shop uses it daily, and he built the entire thing in 8 weeks. During those 8 weeks he also had to learn everything about Claude Code, the terminal, VS Code, everything.
My favorite quote from him was when he said, "I literally did this with zero outside help other than the AI. My favorite tools are screenshots, step by step instructions and asking Claude to explain things like I'm five."
Every trades worker with deep expertise and a willingness to sit down with Claude Code for a few weekends is now a potential software founder.
I can't wait to meet more people like Cory.
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one piece live action is so perfectly camp there’s literally nothing to hate on.
bad wig? no, it’s hilarious.
bad acting? no, they’re capturing the silliness of the cartoon.
And then they nail the hard hitting emotional moments as well.
i legit don’t get the negative comments it’s so good hahaha
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@openclaw We need better update handling for the agent updating itself. I’ve only had success with the instances updating each other but my isolated claws temporarily unalive themselves everytime
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OpenClaw 2026.3.12 🦞
🎛️ dashboard v2 — slick new control UI
⚡ /fast mode for models
🔌 ollama/sglang/vllm → plugins (core goes on a diet)
🛡️ device tokens now ephemeral
⏰ cron + windows reliability fixes
touch grass? nah, touch main 🌿github.com/openclaw/openc…
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@KillersawVT Its awesome to see something on TV that’s shamelessly joyful and has a universally positive message. I also think it does a good job of honoring the source material
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Let me explain what just happened, because I don’t think people realize how INSANE this is.
> Cortical Labs put 200,000 real human brain cells onto a silicon chip and trained them to play Doom in just one week.
> Each CL1 system costs $35,000.
> A rack of 30 units consumes only 850–1,000 watts combined.
> The human brain operates on 20 watts.
> Large AI training clusters burn through megawatts.
>Backed by In-Q-Tel.
115 units began shipping in 2025.
> Cortical Labs is selling “Wetware as a Service” through Cortical Cloud, letting developers deploy code remotely to living human neurons with no lab required,
> priced like a software subscription but powered by real brain cells grown from adult skin and blood samples.
> it isn’t about gaming, it’s about biological computing that could eventually outperform traditional silicon in energy efficiency and adaptability.
This is getting really scary and we’re still at the very beginning.
Polymarket@Polymarket
JUST IN: Petri dish of human brain cells grown on a microchip has learned to play DOOM.
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