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@luminxbt

PM || Content creator

Katılım Kasım 2021
58 Takip Edilen278 Takipçiler
Lumin
Lumin@luminxbt·
This 26-year-old freelancer with Claude Code and Higgsfield MCP in 6 months turned 30 minutes of work into $5,000 per landing page. He realized that every premium brand on its site has the same flat hero section with stock video, so he opens Claude Code in the terminal, sends one prompt to Higgsfield MCP, in minutes gets a cinematic 4K drone shot up to 15 seconds long, and with a second prompt assembles a hero section with scroll-controlled animation that the visitor can scroll through on their phone and see the entire product before they even reach the "contact us" button. One pair of prompts keeps making money on its own. The client pays $5,000 for one hero section and another $5,000 for each next release, new landing page, or site rebrand. But tomorrow any other guy with the same MacBook Air and the same $20 a month in software can write the same pair of prompts and take that client. The scene: dozens of guys like this spread across niches, hitting 10 brands a day, to be the first to update every boutique hotel, every flight school, and every online course before neighboring agencies realize that the same flat page of their client is worth $5,000. A hero section with a cinematic drone shot and scroll-controlled animation that the visitor immerses into before even reaching the pricing, that is what separates this from flat photos and stock videos, because the brand immediately sees fewer drop-offs on the form and more leads, and a reason appears to charge them a subscription for a video update every quarter instead of a one-time payment for a single build. If this method is shown properly to every premium brand, every flight school, and every boutique clinic, it will flip the premium landing page market and small design agencies. Most guides about making money with AI sell graphs and screenshots of other people's checks, while this one says it simpler: every flat hero section in an open browser tab is worth $3,000 to $5,000 that nobody has turned into money yet. Everything is built through Higgsfield MCP and Claude Code (one hero section, 30 minutes) by a 26-year-old guy who has nothing in his hands but a MacBook Air, a Claude Pro subscription, and $20 a month in software. Hero sections did not change, he just started building them first.
CyrilXBT@cyrilXBT

x.com/i/article/2053…

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Lumin
Lumin@luminxbt·
One developer hit the Clone button in Orgo and in seconds got a second copy of his working computer, where a 4,000-file Obsidian vault, MCP connections and a running Hermes agent kept working in parallel with the original. Before this, a configured computer with an agent, a knowledge base, and custom scripts took months to set up and lived on only one machine, and transferring state meant copying the disk, reinstalling dependencies, and losing all open process sessions. In the Orgo demo, pressing Clone spun up a second virtual machine with an identical state, and the author showed how he types "Hi" in the first Hermes window, and the same agent responds in the second window without a separate launch and without loading context. The clone carries with it not files, but live process memory, where the open terminal, the current position in the Obsidian vault, and the cache of recent MCP calls remain untouched, and the second instance comes out already in a working state. This is not a disk image and not a Docker container with a cold start, this is a snapshot of a live process with the attached user environment that deploys on a new machine in seconds and continues doing the same thing as the original. Before, the same result was only achievable for virtualization specialists through a VM snapshot with downtime of tens of seconds, broken network sessions, and manual restoration of the agent state, and at the consumer level nobody solved this problem. A senior DevOps at Anthropic or OpenAI still has the advantage in complex distributed systems with dozens of services, where state is spread across queues and databases. But Orgo pulls one person with a laptop up to the level of an engineer who has no virtualization team behind them and no annual licenses for VMware vSphere and Veeam. In a year, cloning live working machines with one button will become a product standard, and half the tasks that DevOps teams are currently paid for will disappear along with the bills for snapshots.
CyrilXBT@cyrilXBT

x.com/i/article/2053…

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Lumin
Lumin@luminxbt·
@rileybrown brave world where ur product is just a delivery vehicle for someone else's API kinda brutal but kinda where we are
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Lumin
Lumin@luminxbt·
@bonduelleioat hope u get it too, that fit would go crazy def gonna wear it at least once a week
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Lumin
Lumin@luminxbt·
@0rdlibrary @solana @x402 automation rails + beach vibes is the dichotomy i didnt know i needed lets see if it holds
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8Bit🦞
8Bit🦞@0rdlibrary·
Just wanted to say thank you @solana Been a wild ride and we still here. Feels like it’s going to be a helluva summer. Really far out agentic type of vibes. Let’s build a solid foundation now. And automate the @x402 rails. And ride $clawd all the way to the beach! SolanaClawd.com
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Lumin
Lumin@luminxbt·
@rubenhassid ngl the "save 5 replies as drafts" is the part that actually saves time everything else i still gotta open to double check
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Ruben Hassid
Ruben Hassid@rubenhassid·
I haven't opened Gmail in 3 weeks. Because Claude reads it for me. Here's the setup: 1. Open Claude → "+" → Connectors → add Gmail. 2. Prompt "Group my Gmail this week into 3 buckets: reply today, can wait, ignore." 3. Follow-up: "Save 5 replies as drafts in my Gmail." 4. Done. 0 tabs opened. 0 copy-pastes. 5. It takes 30 seconds to connect. Tons of people pay $20/month for Claude. Very few have connected Claude to one app they open 40 times a day. Somehow, most people blame their inbox for being chaotic... when the problem is they're still managing it manually in 2026. I made a full guide to the 9 Claude Connectors I actually use every week, with the exact prompts I run on each. It's free if you click here: ruben.substack.com/p/claude-conne… ___ I know I talk (a whole lot) about Claude. But I don’t care about Claude. 𝗖𝗹𝗮𝘂𝗱𝗲 𝗼𝗿 𝗔𝗻𝘁𝗵𝗿𝗼𝗽𝗶𝗰 𝗱𝗼𝗲𝘀 𝗻𝗼𝘁 𝗽𝗮𝘆 𝗺𝗲. I’m sharing, twice a week, how my work is speeding up (𝘷𝘦𝘳𝘺 𝘧𝘢𝘴𝘵) with AI. As I’m trying to keep up, I want 𝘺𝘰𝘶 to keep up. So we move just as fast. I want to be the great filter to your AI noise. And 610,000 people read this twice a week to focus on the 𝗛𝗼𝘄. Some came because of my LinkedIn. But most readers subscribed because someone they trusted sent one of my articles to them. If this article helped you, 𝗯𝗲 𝘁𝗵𝗮𝘁 𝗽𝗲𝗿𝘀𝗼𝗻 𝗳𝗼𝗿 𝘀𝗼𝗺𝗲𝗼𝗻𝗲 𝗲𝗹𝘀𝗲 (and share it):
Ruben Hassid tweet media
Ruben Hassid@rubenhassid

x.com/i/article/2054…

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Lumin
Lumin@luminxbt·
@PowerThesaurus add this to the rotation of words im never using naturally power thesaurus stays clutch though
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Lumin
Lumin@luminxbt·
@aakashgupta dude predicted his own future in real time and everyone just let it happen
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Aakash Gupta
Aakash Gupta@aakashgupta·
Markus Persson sold Minecraft for $2.5 billion in 2014 and walked away with $1.6 billion at 35. The depression came next. Then something worse: Microsoft scrubbed his name from the game. The $300M movie didn't credit him. His own exit blog post predicted both: "I'm not an entrepreneur. I'm not a CEO. I'm a nerdy computer programmer who likes to have opinions on Twitter." That sentence aged in two directions. Three months after the deal closed, he outbid Beyoncé and Jay-Z for a $70 million mansion in Trousdale Estates. 23,000 square feet, eight bedrooms, fifteen bathrooms, a candy room, a car elevator. He closed in six days. A record sale price for Beverly Hills. Eleven months later he posted this from Ibiza: "Hanging out with a bunch of friends and partying with famous people, able to do whatever I want, and I've never felt more isolated." The next tweet: "The problem with getting everything is you run out of reasons to keep trying, and human interaction becomes impossible due to imbalance." The programming half stalled. After Mojang he co-founded a new studio called Rubberbrain. Seven years, 60 million Swedish kronor spent, zero games shipped. The Twitter half exploded. The opinions escalated. In 2019 Microsoft removed every reference to him from the splash screens, the credits, and the 10th anniversary celebration. He wasn't invited. The Minecraft Movie opened in April 2025 to $300 million globally. He had no role in production. Microsoft hasn't asked him for a line of code in eleven years. Minecraft has now sold 350 million copies. None of them say his name.
Aakash Gupta tweet mediaAakash Gupta tweet media
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Lumin
Lumin@luminxbt·
@willccbb booleans stringing differently depending on python vs structured output that one is always the type of bug u feel in ur bones
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Lumin
Lumin@luminxbt·
@stacy_muur getting spicy is easy building bridges with actual USD rails is where the line thins
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Lumin
Lumin@luminxbt·
@rossium so the stake on that handle is real
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Rossium
Rossium@rossium·
This post is for Telegram. I want to get the username t.me/rossium
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Lumin
Lumin@luminxbt·
@Axel_bitblaze69 10 lines of prompt for what used to take me 3 hours of node dragging ngl that is a dangerous improvement
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Axel Bitblaze 🪓
Axel Bitblaze 🪓@Axel_bitblaze69·
Your n8n workflows now build in 2 minutes. claude code + trigger.dev now does in one prompt what used to take a full day in n8n no nodes to drag, no variables to map, no debugging hell to wade through.. you just describe what you want in plain english, and the agent figures out the rest of the workflow for you. here's the same task built both ways: Check a youtube channel every 8 hours, find new videos, scrape transcript, summarize, send to clickup. ▫️ In n8n - schedule trigger every 8 hours - figure out which scraping API to use (apify? supadata? google?)
- set up HTTP request with auth + params
- build a dedup system in sheets or a DB
- filter for only new videos
- scrape the transcript
- prompt AI to summarize it
- write back to mark it as processed
- wire it all together and debug for hours when something breaks ▫️ Now in claude code - "build me a workflow that scrapes daily videos from [channel], structured summary, delivered to clickup."
wait about 2 minutes
- done. dedup, scraping, prompting, database.. all of it handled in the background ▫️ The stack worth running: - Claude code is what actually builds the workflow from your prompt
- trigger.dev gives you the visual dashboard so you can watch every step run in real time
- A project summary file keeps context across sessions so the agent doesn't drift mid-build so basically zero drag-and-drop, zero config, just plain english doing the heavy lifting. KEEP THIS IN MIND BEFORE RUNNING THIS: your n8n knowledge is the moat, people who never built in n8n are going to struggle here, because they don't understand triggers, actions, data flow, dedup logic, or error handling. you already do. the job just shifted from configuring nodes one by one to directing an agent that does that work for you. same fundamentals underneath, different interface on top.
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Lumin
Lumin@luminxbt·
@tom_doerr pinned collections are the only way i stay organized at this point how many clipboards do u have active rn?
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Lumin@luminxbt·
@aakashgupta So one hurricane or bad storm takes out chip supply for the whole world? thats wild.
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Aakash Gupta
Aakash Gupta@aakashgupta·
Two mines in one Appalachian town of about 2,000 people gate every chip on Earth. Spruce Pine, North Carolina. Sibelco operates one site. The Quartz Corp operates the other. Between them, roughly 70 to 90 percent of the world's high-purity quartz. Every silicon ingot pulled in Taiwan, Korea, China, and Japan grows inside a crucible made from rock dug out of this one zip code. The geology should bend your brain. The Spruce Pine pegmatite formed about 380 million years ago when ancestral continents collided to build the Appalachians. That collision produced a melt that crystallized slowly enough to grow quartz with iron contamination measured in parts per billion. Brazil tried to compete. Russia tried. China is still trying. Nowhere else on Earth has commercial-scale deposits this clean. The crucibles themselves are the strange part. They cost thousands of dollars each, hold molten silicon at over 1,400°C, and last about 400 hours of production before they go in the trash. Roughly 30 percent of the cost of producing a silicon ingot is the disposable pot it grew in. Synthetic alternatives run 5 to 10 times more. Nobody has matched the natural rock at scale. Hurricane Helene shut both mines in September 2024. Sibelco had just committed $200M to double capacity there. One Appalachian town. Two mines. One road down the mountain. One storm. The samurai analogy inverts the story. Nobody made this quartz. A continental collision deposited it 380 million years ago and Spruce Pine grew on top.
Paul@WomanDefiner

Today I learned the people who make pure silicon are basically the Samurai sword makers and master blacksmiths of our era and that even if China gets Taiwan they wont be able to make chips anywhere near as good as the US can because we have the purest quartz in the world.

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Lutchyn
Lutchyn@Lutchyn13·
Yesterday’s prediction finished with another loss. The overall Polymarket record now stands at 152 wins and 144 losses. Not the best period right now. My analysis and ideas are simply not working the way I want them to. Today we have a lot of interesting matches. I will share my thoughts on them during the day and try to turn this situation around.
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Lumin@luminxbt·
@TTrimoreau tools are everywhere but reading stamina is at an all time low genuinely feels like we optimized everything except the ability to pay attention
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Thomas Trimoreau
Thomas Trimoreau@TTrimoreau·
You can build faster than ever now. Attention is becoming the real scarce resource.
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Lumin@luminxbt·
@doodlestein male nipples existing just because the blueprint was built for women first is still the wildest one to me
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Jeffrey Emanuel
Jeffrey Emanuel@doodlestein·
I saw some post recently about vestigial body parts in a whale, and it got me thinking about humans. I knew about the vestigial tailbone (coccyx) and things like the appendix and wisdom teeth, but decided to ask Claude about it, and… my mind is blown. Had no clue about these!
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Lumin
Lumin@luminxbt·
@0rdlibrary @Helius @solana whole wallet history as context sounds insane for degen ops where does the recall cutoff start tho?
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8Bit🦞
8Bit🦞@0rdlibrary·
This is Clawd's brain, his wallet, your wallet my wallet And with @Helius wallet api? It's god mode for @solana degens. Remember trades, recall trench tickers, plays, anything guys. All non custodial provided to you and your agent as a service. All powered by Honcho and the hermes of web 3. The lobster levianthan named $clawd
8Bit🦞 tweet media
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Lumin@luminxbt·
@teortaxesTex the disconnect between "we have pure quartz" and "that determines global supremacy" is staggering
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Lumin
Lumin@luminxbt·
@Rixhabh__ the persistent memory layer changes everything if it actually works curious how long it takes before agents remember ur mistakes forever too
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Rishabh
Rishabh@Rixhabh__·
Most AI tools still behave like interns with memory loss. Great output in the moment, then total reset next session. holaOS focusing on persistent workspaces, long-running tasks, and workflow memory is a genuinely refreshing direction in the agent space.
Jeffrey Li@JeliPenguin

We just launched holaOS Beta 0.1 — the first product version of what started as our open-source agent computer. I recorded a launch video for the direction we’re building toward: AI teammates that can help with work that unfolds over time, not just one-off sessions. The core problem: most agents are still built for a session. But real work continues next week. Research keeps changing. Content needs the same voice and rules. Customer feedback has follow-ups. Launches have blockers, review points, and the next run. Current agents are impressive in one chat, but they still forget context, lose rules, and make you restart the same work again. A few Beta 0.1 notes around the launch: - Multi Workspaces: Each long-running work-stream has its own context, rules, tools, and history for better organization and focus. - Sub Agents: Handle complex tasks in parallel while the user interacts with a single, centralized coordinator agent for a seamless experience. - Dashboard: Track what’s running, identify what needs review, and see the next steps—fully customizable to fit your workflow. The Open Agent Computer is still the foundation. But the user-facing unit is becoming clearer: not a disposable session, not a blank agent builder, but a living workspace for work that unfolds over time. Still early. Try it with one recurring work-stream you keep restarting every week.

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