Amod Agrawal

15.9K posts

Amod Agrawal banner
Amod Agrawal

Amod Agrawal

@agrawalamod

Devices and Sensing @AmazonLab126, Grad @IllinoisCS, CS @IIITDelhi

San Francisco Bay Area Katılım Ağustos 2008
554 Takip Edilen487 Takipçiler
Amod Agrawal retweetledi
Aakash Gupta
Aakash Gupta@aakashgupta·
Anthropic is building OpenClaw faster than OpenAI is. OpenClaw proved a concept the entire industry had been theorizing about: your AI agent should live on your computer, not in someone else’s cloud, and you should be able to talk to it from anywhere. 318,000 GitHub stars. Then Steinberger joined OpenAI to build exactly this at scale. Here’s what OpenAI has shipped since: Codex, a desktop coding agent with no mobile remote control. ChatGPT Agent, which runs on a remote virtual computer in OpenAI’s cloud where it can’t see your local files. Developers are filing GitHub issues on the Codex repo right now requesting phone-to-desktop control. Third-party devs already built Taskdex and Remote Codetrol to hack around the gap with relay servers and Tailscale tunnels. Anthropic just shipped it natively. Dispatch: pair your phone with Claude Desktop, message Cowork from anywhere, come back to finished work. Cowork already had the VM running on your machine, full filesystem access, browser control, sub-agent coordination, and a skills system stored as markdown. Dispatch was the missing piece that turns the whole stack into something you can operate from your pocket. The reason this works when cloud agents can’t: Cowork reads your actual filesystem, your actual browser, your actual connected tools. When I ask it to cross-reference a local spreadsheet with a competitor’s pricing page, it can do that because both the spreadsheet and the browser are on my machine. A cloud agent would need me to upload the spreadsheet first, lose the file path context, and still wouldn’t have access to my connected Slack or Google Drive. The context is real because the machine is real. I’ve been running Cowork since launch. Five tasks dispatched every morning before my kids wake up: research briefs, competitor analysis, file organization, data pulls from local spreadsheets, editing passes on drafts. 90 minutes of active work compressed into 10 minutes of dispatching and 20 minutes of reviewing outputs. Dispatch changes what happens the rest of the day. An idea hits while I’m out, I message Cowork from my phone, the work is waiting when I get home. And the part that should keep OpenAI up at night: Anthropic didn’t need to acquire OpenClaw or hire Steinberger to ship this. They were already building the same architecture independently. Cowork launched in January with local VM execution, filesystem access, and markdown skills before OpenClaw was even mainstream. Steinberger validated the demand. Anthropic had already built the supply. OpenAI bought the architect. They’re still looking for the blueprints he left at Anthropic’s door.
Felix Rieseberg@felixrieseberg

We're shipping a new feature in Claude Cowork as a research preview that I'm excited about: Dispatch! One persistent conversation with Claude that runs on your computer. Message it from your phone. Come back to finished work. To try it out, download Claude Desktop, then pair your phone.

English
37
48
447
121.2K
Amod Agrawal retweetledi
Felix Rieseberg
Felix Rieseberg@felixrieseberg·
We're shipping a new feature in Claude Cowork as a research preview that I'm excited about: Dispatch! One persistent conversation with Claude that runs on your computer. Message it from your phone. Come back to finished work. To try it out, download Claude Desktop, then pair your phone.
English
969
1.5K
17.4K
6.1M
Amod Agrawal retweetledi
Shishir
Shishir@ShishirShelke1·
No wonder why Huawei got banned
English
2.2K
22.2K
195.4K
9.8M
Amod Agrawal retweetledi
sudox
sudox@kmcnam1·
sudox tweet media
ZXX
57
1.6K
17.3K
302.1K
Amod Agrawal retweetledi
Yuchen Jin
Yuchen Jin@Yuchenj_UW·
I can’t believe people in SF Bay Area are paying $6k for an in-person OpenClaw install. It’s literally just a one-time setup on a Mac mini. This is insane! Time to switch your jobs guys.
Yuchen Jin tweet media
English
364
159
3.3K
962.6K
Amod Agrawal retweetledi
Abhishek
Abhishek@MSDianAbhiii·
Nothing has gone right in the world since a man ate a bat in China.
English
127
2.5K
26.6K
509.4K
Amod Agrawal retweetledi
ShadesOfBlueAndRed
ShadesOfBlueAndRed@ShadesOfBlueAn1·
i hope you are holding onto your msft stocks from the 90s if you are, don't forget to thank "Indian H1B" Satya Nadella
ShadesOfBlueAndRed tweet media
The Lunduke Journal@LundukeJournal

The CEO of Microsoft (Satya Nadella, from India) just hired a new, unqualified VP of Xbox (Asha Sharma, whose family is from India), replacing a white guy (Phil Spencer). Normally the ethnicity of a person in a role doesn't actually matter. Who cares what part of the world a person has ancestry from, as long as they do a good job... right? But, in this case, it's worth pointing out a strange -- highly racist -- pattern within Microsoft. That pattern is this: Microsoft managers from India, disproportionately hire people also from India (even if those people are less qualified than other, non-Indian, candidates). A pattern which is overtly racist and anti-meritocracy. In the case of Asha Sharma, the new Xbox lead, this is glaringly obvious... as she has no experience, whatsoever, working in games. Zero. Not a drop of gaming. (Her longest tenures were at Instacart and working on Facebook messaging.) Are we to believe that there were zero candidates available, to lead one of the largest gaming organizations in the world (Xbox), with significant experience working in the gaming industry? Not *one*? That is extremely unlikely. In fact, I can say with absolute certainty that there are many managers and directors, already working within Microsoft, with extensive experience (decades) shipping successful games and gaming hardware. And that's just the internal candidates. Which means that Asha Sharma was likely hired for a reason other than her applicable work experience. It is a reasonable assumption, based on Microsoft's established patterns, that she was hired because of her ethnicity. Microsoft is one of the largest users of H1-B visas within the entire Tech industry -- with the vast majority of those H1-B's going to employees from India. More workers from India, replacing non-Indian workers. Every Microsoft employee has seen this happen over the years. A little personal anecdote: Back in the late 1990's, I worked within a small team at Microsoft (only a dozen or so people). When I first joined, the team looked roughly like the surrounding area (Redmond, WA): Mostly white, with one Indian, and one Korean. It was roughly proportional to the community. The Indian man was then promoted to a management position. And, quickly, things changed. In less than 1 year, the team was now predominantly Indian (with a few people of other Asian ancestry)... with only 3 White guys remaining. Within a single year, the demographic ratio had flipped. It now no longer matched the city in which we worked. Then things got weird. The team moved to a new floor of the building, and every employee within the group was given their own, individual office. Well. Every employee... except for the 3 White guys. We were put, together, in the smallest office available. The size of a long, thin closet. In fact... I believe it was originally just a storage closet. It was so cramped that, whenever the guy at the back of the "office" needed to leave the room... the other two guys had to get up and exit one at a time. Single file. We called it "The Honky Closet". All requests for the "Honkies" to move to space where we could fit was denied by non-Honky management (despite several offices remaining empty). The purpose was clear. It was one, of many, attempts to get the remaining "White guys" to willingly quit. Which we all did within a matter of months. And, yes, those roles we also replaced with "non-Honkies".

English
4
33
382
19.1K
Amod Agrawal retweetledi
Kristen
Kristen@Kica333·
The worst thing about trying to parallel park are the witnesses.
English
289
5.2K
52K
950.4K
Amod Agrawal retweetledi
blue
blue@bluewmist·
you must learn to enjoy life without needing an audience to see that you are enjoying life.
English
197
6.5K
25.6K
507.1K
Amod Agrawal retweetledi
pdawg
pdawg@prathamgrv·
when claude code finishes my task before i even start scrolling reels
pdawg tweet media
English
112
816
16.5K
489K
Amod Agrawal retweetledi
David K 🎹
David K 🎹@DavidKPiano·
Claude: Hey, mind if I grep -ohP "useEffect\(.*?\[\K[^\]]+" **/*.tsx 2>&1|tr ',' '\n'|awk 'NF{$1=$1;a[$0]++}END{for(k in a)print a[k],k}'|sort -rn|head -20 Me: ... yeah go for it dude
English
147
674
14.1K
590.2K
Amod Agrawal retweetledi
Tom Warren
Tom Warren@tomwarren·
I hope Apple’s new year resolution is to fix the iOS keyboard
English
99
86
1.6K
111.9K
Amod Agrawal retweetledi
∿
@somewheresy·
it is now Q2 of the 21st century
English
153
6.5K
68.3K
1.4M
Amod Agrawal retweetledi
The Cats 𝕏
The Cats 𝕏@TheCatsX·
Art Artist
The Cats 𝕏 tweet mediaThe Cats 𝕏 tweet media
English
69
9.9K
132.3K
1.6M
Amod Agrawal retweetledi
Samuel Nam
Samuel Nam@thesamuelnam·
Yo did Apple change the world with this update? Why is it 10.79GB?!
Samuel Nam tweet media
English
212
60
3.2K
546.4K
Amod Agrawal retweetledi
James Blunt
James Blunt@JBlunt1018·
700k H-1B workers have somehow become the villains in a country of 330,000,000. That’s 0.4% of the workforce. 0.2% of the population, A rounding error turned into a national crisis. Can you spot it? If you don’t see this as an attack on legal immigrants. I don’t have anything left to say.
James Blunt tweet media
English
2K
524
3.5K
2M