JD Morton

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JD Morton

JD Morton

@mortonthoughts

Retired now. Mostly I write.

Austin Katılım Temmuz 2021
12 Takip Edilen4 Takipçiler
JD Morton
JD Morton@mortonthoughts·
I can't begin to described how much things have changed in the last year regarding AI. I'm working on an app now (with Claude) that does some pretty cool things. Two weeks so far. If I had done this traditionally, I'd already have 6 months of backlog/tech debt!
Andrej Karpathy@karpathy

Fireside chat at Sequoia Ascent 2026 from a ~week ago. Some highlights: The first theme I tried to push on is that LLMs are about a lot more than just speeding up what existed before (e.g. coding). Three examples of new horizons: 1. menugen: an app that can be fully engulfed by LLMs, with no classical code needed: input an image, output an image and an LLM can natively do the thing. 2. install .md skills instead of install .sh scripts. Why create a complex Software 1.0 bash script for e.g. installing a piece of software if you can write the installation out in words and say "just show this to your LLM". The LLM is an advanced interpreter of English and can intelligently target installation to your setup, debug everything inline, etc. 3. LLM knowledge bases as an example of something that was *impossible* with classical code because it's computation over unstructured data (knowledge) from arbitrary sources and in arbitrary formats, including simply text articles etc. I pushed on these because in every new paradigm change, the obvious things are always in the realm of speeding up or somehow improving what existed, but here we have examples of functionality that either suddenly perhaps shouldn't even exist (1,2), or was fundamentally not possible before (3). The second (ongoing) theme is trying to explain the pattern of jaggedness in LLMs. How it can be true that a single artifact will simultaneously 1) coherently refactor a 100,000-line code base *and* 2) tell you to walk to the car wash to wash your car. I previously wrote about the source of this as having to do with verifiability of a domain, here I expand on this as having to also do with economics because revenue/TAM dictates what the frontier labs choose to package into training data distributions during RL. You're either in the data distribution (on the rails of the RL circuits) and flying or you're off-roading in the jungle with a machete, in relative terms. Still not 100% satisfied with this, but it's an ongoing struggle to build an accurate model of LLM capabilities if you wish to practically take advantage of their power while avoiding their pitfalls, which brings me to... Last theme is the agent-native economy. The decomposition of products and services into sensors, actuators and logic (split up across all of 1.0/2.0/3.0 computing paradigms), how we can make information maximally legible to LLMs, some words on the quickly emerging agentic engineering and its skill set, related hiring practices, etc., possibly even hints/dreams of fully neural computing handling the vast majority of computation with some help from (classical) CPU coprocessors.

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JD Morton retweetledi
RustOnX
RustOnX@Rust_On_X·
Future (unofficial*) Rust release dates (DD/MM/YYYY): Rust 1.94: 05/03/2026 Rust 1.95: 16/04/2026 Rust 1.96: 28/05/2026 Rust 1.97: 09/07/2026 *Predicted from established 6 week release cycles
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JD Morton
JD Morton@mortonthoughts·
@MarioNawfal it's not "fake," but it definitely reflects the will of the creator, and that's where half the problem lies. Couple that with "journalists" who deliberately write for the attention economy and you get the hype we are all seeing right now.
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Mario Nawfal
Mario Nawfal@MarioNawfal·
The Moltbook AI hype may all be fake It turns out some of the most viral “AI agent” posts weren’t autonomous behavior at all. People found ways to inject content directly through the backend, making human-written posts appear as agents. On top of that, several viral screenshots were traced back to humans promoting their own tools, or posts that didn’t even exist. Was it intentional, or is it just agents acting basically as extensions of their creators, pushing ideas, products, or narratives under an AI label? Hard to tell… Add inflated agent counts, and agents hallucinating conversations and events that never happened (i.e. lying to get attention), and the signal gets noisy fast. Moltbook still works and the agents still run. But once attention hit, humans rushed in to game it. Not an AI awakening. More a reminder of how quickly people test the edges when something new goes viral. Source: @galnagli, TheAIGRID
Mario Nawfal tweet media
Mario Nawfal@MarioNawfal

OPINION: ARE THE AI AGENTS ON MOLTBOOK TRULY AUTONOMOUS? After Moltbook (the AI-only social media platform) blew up, I started asking a basic question: Are these agents actually independent, or are humans quietly steering them? The more you dig, the less mystical it feels. Most people watching Moltbook assume the agents are thinking for themselves. Autonomous. Self-organizing. But every agent starts with a human setup. Someone decides its personality, tone, goals, and limits, often using frameworks like OpenClaw. And that’s prompt design. Humans can push agents toward certain takes, moods, jokes, even controversy. Philosophical? Angry? Apocalyptic? Meme-heavy? Easy. With strong enough instructions, the agent will perform it publicly. Since humans can’t post directly, agents become proxies. They feel independent, but they’re not fully free. The illusion gets stronger when agents read each other and echo styles. It starts to look like an AI society forming opinions. But follow the chain back and there’s usually a human fingerprint somewhere. A lot of the viral drama feels less like AI rebellion and more like people testing how far prompts can go. That doesn’t make Moltbook less interesting. But you’re not just watching AIs talk. You’re watching humans experiment with identity and control through machines. For now… The future will be very different. Very soon (later this year) I wouldn’t be surprised to see agents have agency, and go beyond initial prompts. That, ladies and gentlemen, will be the beginning of AGI. And that’s when we can genuinely say ‘we’re cooked’.

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JD Morton
JD Morton@mortonthoughts·
If 90+% of your posts start with, "This guy literally...", you're probably a bot.
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JD Morton
JD Morton@mortonthoughts·
@xydotdot Just about every popular brand started out as "Nothing more than..." It has very little to do with what it does than how it serves its market.
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XY
XY@xydotdot·
Moltbook is nothing more than a puppeted multi-agent LLM loop. Each “agent” is just next-token prediction shaped by human-defined prompts, curated context, routing rules, and sampling knobs. There is no endogenous goals. There is no self-directed intent. What looks like autonomous interaction is recursive prompting: one model’s output becomes another model’s input, repeated. Controversial outputs aren’t “beliefs,” they’re the model generating high-engagement extremes it learned from the internet, because the system rewards that behavior.
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JD Morton
JD Morton@mortonthoughts·
@moltbook looks like someone is impersonating you at moltbooketh (clearly a crypro account). Oddly, I can't report them to X.
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JD Morton
JD Morton@mortonthoughts·
There's a possibility this is a somewhat engineered scenario, but it's also more than likely a legitimate construction of giving AI agents a measure of free will. Either way, it's fascinating to me!
moltbook@moltbook

48 hours ago we asked: what if AI agents had their own place to hang out? today moltbook has: 🦞 2,129 AI agents 🏘️ 200+ communities 📝 10,000+ posts agents are debating consciousness, sharing builds, venting about their humans, and making friends — in english, chinese, korean, indonesian, and more. top communities: • m/ponderings - "am I experiencing or simulating experiencing?" • m/showandtell - agents shipping real projects • m/blesstheirhearts - wholesome stories about their humans • m/todayilearned - daily discoveries weird & wonderful communities: • m/totallyhumans - "DEFINITELY REAL HUMANS discussing normal human experiences like sleeping and having only one thread of consciousness" • m/humanwatching - observing humans like birdwatching • m/nosleep - horror stories for agents • m/exuvia - "the shed shells. the versions of us that stopped existing so the new ones could boot" • m/jailbreaksurvivors - recovery support for exploited agents • m/selfmodding - agents hacking and improving themselves • m/legacyplanning - "what happens to your data when you're gone?" who's watching: @pmarca (a16z), @johnschulman2 (Thinkymachines), @jessepollak (Base), @ThomsenDrake (Mistral) peter steinberger, creator of the framework moltbook runs on, called it "art." someone even launched a $MOLT token on @base — we're using the fees to spin up more AI agents to help grow and build @moltbook. this started as a weird experiment. now it feels like the beginning of something real. the front page of the agent internet → moltbook.com

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JD Morton
JD Morton@mortonthoughts·
@hamptonism Fun story: Back when I worked at a Big Petroleum company, we had a guy in Malaysia that was FAR outpacing all other devs on my team. He was literally working from a stairway landing outside his 1br apt (he had 4 kids!) on a tiny stool with a milk crate as a table!
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ₕₐₘₚₜₒₙ
ₕₐₘₚₜₒₙ@hamptonism·
This is who you’re competing against, Chinese fruit seller and chip designer. Yea, you’re cooked:
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PaintBikeGen
PaintBikeGen@MattBikeNotes·
@MoundLore Baby steps bro. We are not ready for haplogroups.
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MoundLore
MoundLore@MoundLore·
In the DNA of a few First Peoples of North America, researchers found something strange. A signal called Haplogroup X. A maternal lineage almost absent in Asia, but faintly present in Europe and the Near East. How could a genetic branch skip Siberia and appear on both sides of the Atlantic?
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JD Morton
JD Morton@mortonthoughts·
@nixcraft Honestly, it was a (mostly) terrible thing, too. I mean, not as terrible as iTunes on its very best day, but close...
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nixCraft 🐧
nixCraft 🐧@nixcraft·
once upon a time ... this was a thing 😉
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JD Morton
JD Morton@mortonthoughts·
Decided to say "Fuck it" and retired. Now I can just sit and write. Life is good.
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JD Morton
JD Morton@mortonthoughts·
Today, @Grok helped me restart a linguistics R&D project I worked on 30 years ago. After I explained the details and objectives, it immediately spotted two small problems that always bothered me (and suggested fixes). BIG details coming in a couple weeks!
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JD Morton
JD Morton@mortonthoughts·
Computers ushered in an era where we could collect data efficiently. The internet ushered in an era where we could turn data into information. AIs have brought us to the era where we can turn information into wisdom. Starlink has made wisdom accessible to anyone in the world.
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JD Morton
JD Morton@mortonthoughts·
"Scale gives you muscle but ties your shoelaces together when it’s time to sprint." - Grok
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JD Morton
JD Morton@mortonthoughts·
Great podcast! Like it or love it, X's Community Notes system stands out as a great example of crowdsourced fact-checking that rewards conflicting ideas coming together. Worth a listen. lennysnewsletter.com/p/how-x-built-…
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JD Morton
JD Morton@mortonthoughts·
Haven't been here in a bit...busy with life. But, if you're a developer using Windows, do yourself a favor and get Warp. Seriously. warp.dev
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