Dan Moen

342 posts

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Dan Moen

Dan Moen

@danmoen

Marketing + Technology

Seattle Katılım Mayıs 2008
347 Takip Edilen2.1K Takipçiler
Dan Moen
Dan Moen@danmoen·
@MoeCanDoIt Use AI to help you develop brand guidelines and custom CSS classes it can use when it's building. Start every thread by making it read through both and then summarize its understanding. This helps with UI consistency, but not UX. That's on you.
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Moe
Moe@MoeCanDoIt·
so it's great that we can whip up an app in minutes with claude but if you are not UI/UX savvy what do you do (with AI) to give your app a great look?
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Tyler Neville
Tyler Neville@Tyler_Neville_·
5 Interesting Facts on Treasuries from Torsten Slok at Apollo: 1. For every $5 the government collects in taxes, a dollar goes to paying interest on debt. 2. $10 trillion of government debt will mature over the next year, which is 33% of all debt outstanding. 3. The share of T-bills outstanding has increased to 22%, and 85% of Treasury gross issuance is T-bills. 4. The average federal net interest expense per day, including weekends, is now $3.5 billion. 5. Foreign ownership of Treasuries has declined to 25% of the total outstanding, down from 33% a decade ago.
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Boring_Business
Boring_Business@BoringBiz_·
From Bertrand Russell almost a 100 years ago Society would be much better off if they realized that neither party is coming to save you If you want to change yourself, get off your couch and make it happen If you want to change the world, get off your couch and make it happen
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Dan Moen
Dan Moen@danmoen·
@anu_sthree This moment will pass *very* quickly, and a quilt is a brilliant idea for a useful memento.
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Sliced Bread
Sliced Bread@anu_sthree·
I'm torn. My baby is already outgrowing her newborn clothes. Do I donate them, or so I make a quilt out of my favourite ones?
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Dan Moen
Dan Moen@danmoen·
Support companies have ruined the chatbot opportunity for everyone. Users won't even try them because they assume they're useless. I have had literally zero positive interactions with a chatbot powered by a traditional support platform.
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🍓🍓🍓
🍓🍓🍓@iruletheworldmo·
i never want to read any other way again.
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Justen Raw
Justen Raw@JustenEcom·
Supporting others costs nothing. A quick like on a promo post. A fast comment on a celebration. Just 2 seconds to drop a ‘W’ and lift someone up.
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Dan Moen
Dan Moen@danmoen·
@JustenEcom Ah, makes sense. So it gave you creative direction and you executed the design elsewhere. Looks amazing, nice work!
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Dan Moen
Dan Moen@danmoen·
@JustenEcom What did you ask Claude for? Art direction and copy?
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Justen Raw
Justen Raw@JustenEcom·
I tried to upgrade my banner with AI… and got a reality check. For fun, I gave ChatGPT and Claude the exact same input. The results were… not even close: ChatGPT: total disaster 🤝 Claude: actual “optimization” (like you’d expect) After a bit of fine-tuning, the Claude version is now my banner.
Justen Raw tweet media
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Dan Moen
Dan Moen@danmoen·
This applies equally to Washington and Oregon.
David Marcus@davidmarcus

Close your eyes. Imagine a place where ocean, mountains, deserts, and lakes meet — paired with some of the most forgiving, life-giving weather on Earth. A place where almost anything grows. A place so attractive that this era’s greatest builders and innovators chose to gather there to shape the future. And they did. They turned it into the fifth-largest economy in the world. An Elysium on Earth. A place so extraordinarily fortunate that many of its people were spared the anxieties that dominate most of human life. And when survival is no longer the concern, attention drifts elsewhere. Toward injustices far away. Toward suffering not personally experienced. Toward a desire to cleanse immense good fortune by shouldering everyone else’s pain. That impulse was put into action. The people elected leaders who promised to right all the wrongs of the world. These leaders were not builders — those were too busy building. Instead, they were specialists in rhetoric: masters of moral language, of verbal combat, of channeling abstract ideals of justice and equity. Suicidal empathy finally found its weapon. Meanwhile, the builders — optimistic, competitive, forward-looking — kept building. They ignored the slow erosion of common sense metastasizing around them. Years passed. Things worsened. The cancer took hold. Zombies appeared. Not monsters from fiction, but human beings hollowed out — addicted, untreated, unaccountable — wandering through once-beautiful streets. Downtowns decayed. Public spaces emptied. The social contract dissolved in plain sight. The people who wanted to fix the world now felt unsafe in their own neighborhoods. But they blamed themselves. They rejected self-will and agency. They believed that when individuals collapse, society must have failed first. So they doubled down. More years passed. On top of zombies and collapsing public order came an exploding cost of living. The place became unaffordable for most. People began to leave. That’s when those in power panicked. If the people who kept them in office were leaving, how would they remain in power? After all, this was not just their job — it was the only thing they were capable of doing. They could not build, create, or compete in any environment that rewards real output. Outside of politics, they would have nothing to offer and nowhere to hide. So they adapted — not by fixing what was broken, but by rigging the system to ensure they would never have to face a world that measures value by results. They imported voters. They diluted standards. They stretched rules past recognition. Ballot harvesting. Voting without identification. Endless “emergency” justifications. They let cities burn — sometimes metaphorically, sometimes literally. Eventually, the builders noticed. Too late. And they began to leave as well. The place that once held every advantage any society could dream of — the place where the future was being built — started to collapse. The cancer and its caregivers transformed Elysium into Tartarus. This is the path California is on. Whether this paradise becomes hell is still within our control — but not indefinitely. The window is closing. Let’s fight back and make it Elysium again.

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Dan Moen
Dan Moen@danmoen·
@BridgetMWillard As a Seahawks fan and huge Pete Carroll fan I hope he either goes to a team ready to compete for a championship or retires.
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Bridget Willard
Bridget Willard@BridgetMWillard·
Who's going to snap up Pete Carroll?
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Dan Moen
Dan Moen@danmoen·
Are you overwhelmed by new content while your top-performing assets gather dust? Stop producing more. Strategically promote your proven work. Audiences value consistency and quality over volume. Reuse. Reclaim. Reengage. 🚀 #ContentMarketing #Strategy
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Dan Moen
Dan Moen@danmoen·
@orbmem @tehinshe Going beyond session will require some kind of summarization technique, which could become its own project.
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Dan Moen
Dan Moen@danmoen·
@orbmem @tehinshe My take is session-level memory is the right place to start. Which means you need to send the session-level chat history with each call *and* write your prompt well enough the the LLM doesn't ignore it.
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Tehinshe Oluwafemi | AI Automation
Starting 2026 with clarity. I've decided to focus on AI Automation for e-commerce. Spent today on research and planning, understanding how AI can help online stores save time and money through customer support automation. Tomorrow, I start building my first chatbot.🌸🔥
Tehinshe Oluwafemi | AI Automation tweet media
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Dan Moen
Dan Moen@danmoen·
@zara_ferna94287 Any examples you think are awesome? Sephora Beauty Chat is the best of the big brand offerings I've seen so far.
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Zara Fernandes
Zara Fernandes@zara_ferna94287·
@danmoen Hey @danmoen, I’ve added simple site AI chats that lifted engagement around 12% to 15% on a few web builds I’ve found small tweaks make users actually use it more What problem are you trying to solve with the AI chat on your page?
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Dan Moen
Dan Moen@danmoen·
Has anyone had a good experience with an AI assistant on a website? Like the chat AI or anything integrated into a page?
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Dan Moen
Dan Moen@danmoen·
@zara_ferna94287 My goal this week was just to try all of the best examples out there. More a learning exercise than seeking a specific solution. Since most of them suck, I built one to see why it's hard. Turns out it's not actually hard.
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Sherry Holub - Wizard of Web
Sherry Holub - Wizard of Web@jvmediadesign·
@danmoen The Oura ring chat bot was able to detect an issue with my ring and initiate a shipment of a replacement in like 2 minutes 😅
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Dan Moen
Dan Moen@danmoen·
@saadullah45 All of that makes sense! I would probably add a 3rd call up front at 100 articles: 1. Pick up to n categories (nano) 2. Pick up to 3 articles from chosen categories (mini) 3. Write the answer (premium)
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SaadU
SaadU@saadullah45·
Smart setup! If your Hugo content fits the context window, skipping a vector DB is a great way to keep latency low. Where RAG would level this up: 1. Semantic Matching: The 'File Picker' relies on keywords. RAG understands meaning, so if a user asks about 'rates' but your file is pricing.md, it won’t miss the connection. 2. Scalability: As you hit 100+ articles, sending a huge list of filenames to the first LLM becomes slow/expensive. A vector DB handles that search instantly.
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