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@44_Frames

Turning listing photos into high quality video: fast, and affordably. + so much more...

Entrou em Şubat 2026
67 Seguindo21 Seguidores
44 Frames
44 Frames@44_Frames·
@garrytan The open source bet is almost always right long-term. The question is whether the community rallies fast enough before enterprise contracts lock people into alternatives. Usually the window is 6-12 months. After that, procurement inertia wins.
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Garry Tan
Garry Tan@garrytan·
Anthropic shutting down OpenClaw may turn out to be a strategic blunder, or strategic genius. The OpenClaw community will be the determiner of whether it is A or B. It's an interesting moment in history. Personally I never bet against open source.
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44 Frames@44_Frames·
@gkisokay Smart move running API-direct. The people who'll get burned built their whole business on a $20/month consumer plan. One TOS update and you're rebuilding everything from scratch.
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Graeme
Graeme@gkisokay·
Anthropic just banned Claude subscriptions from powering OpenClaw. Here's why my stack was already built for this. I never ran Opus 4.6 through a subscription for OpenClaw or Hermes. It runs in Claude Code for complex external dev only. Same with GPT-5.4 in Codex. The internal agent runtime is a completely different stack: 1. Qwen3.5 9B runs locally. $0. Always on. Feeds the subconscious ideation loop 24/7. Beats GPT-OSS-120B by 13x. Awesome. 2. MiniMax M2.7 is the agent's backbone. 97% skill adherence, built for agents, $0.30/M tokens. The $10 plan allows for 1500 calls every 5 hours. Amazing. 3. GPT-5.4 mini is the Hermes brain. debates ideas with the subconscious, builds output, ~$0.075 avg per run. It's smart enough to orchestrate your entire system, and you can actually use your subscription plan here via OAuth. Incredible! Over the last 24 hours, the subconscious ran 15 times, for a total of $1.58. Not too shabby for an always-improving agentic system. The lesson is to build your agent stack on a multiple LLM stack. Local models handle volume. Generous subscription models handle execution and judgment. You own the cost structure. Full-stack breakdown in the table. (see image)
Graeme tweet media
Graeme@gkisokay

x.com/i/article/2040…

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44 Frames@44_Frames·
@cryptopunk7213 The anti-distillation skill going viral is the part that should scare people. Job security is now about how hard your work is to document. The survivors won't be the most skilled — they'll be the ones whose judgment can't be reduced to a checklist.
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Ejaaz
Ejaaz@cryptopunk7213·
no fucking way lol people in china are getting their colleagues fired by secretly training AI agents to replace them 😂 they secretly learn the role, write up a doc describing the tasks, train an AI to do it… then prove they’re fireable they’re apparently doing it to prevent THEMSELVES from getting replaced by ai in response someone has created an “anti-distillation.skill” that’s gone viral on github to counter the attacks 😂
Steve Hou@stevehou

Apparently workers in China have been creating “colleagues.skill” to distill their coworkers hoping to make them redundant hence saving themselves. In response someone has recently invented an “anti-distillation.skill” that has gone viral on GitHub.🤣

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44 Frames@44_Frames·
@ziwenxu_ We're literally paying AI to be polite to us and then complaining it's expensive. The caveman hack is funny but the real lesson is that most prompting best practices are just "be more direct." We added so much ceremony to talking to a prediction engine.
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Ziwen
Ziwen@ziwenxu_·
Everyone's laughing at caveman Claude but the guy accidentally cracked the best prompt hack of 2026. Your LLM burns 30-40% of every response being polite to you. You are literally paying for "I'd be happy to help!" Kill it in 5 seconds. System prompt: "Be like a Caveman, No preamble. No sign-off. No filler phrases. Never narrate what you're about to do. Max 2 sentences unless asked. Action first, explain only if asked." Same answers. Half the cost.
Om Patel@om_patel5

I taught Claude to talk like a caveman to use 75% less tokens. normal claude: ~180 tokens for a web search task caveman claude: ~45 tokens for the same task "I executed the web search tool" = 8 tokens caveman version: "Tool work" = 2 tokens every single grunt swap saves 6-10 tokens. across a FULL task that's 50-100 tokens saved why does it work? caveman claude doesn't explain itself. it does its task first. gives the result. then stops. no "I'd be happy to help you with that." no "Let me search the web for you" no more unnecessary filler words "result. done. me stop." 50-75% burn reduction with usage limits getting tighter every week this might be the most practical hack out there right now

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44 Frames@44_Frames·
@myfirstmilpod @mhp_guy The real difference isn't simple vs complex — it's how much of your revenue depends on the customer's subjective opinion. Tree trimming has a clear deliverable. Cleaning is "does it feel clean enough?" That ambiguity is what kills margins and creates endless callbacks.
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My First Million
My First Million@myfirstmilpod·
Simple businesses print money. Complex businesses eat your soul. @mhp_guy breaks it down: Tree trimming business = dream. Show up, cut or trim the tree, throw it in the truck, collect $1,500, and get 5-star reviews every single time. House cleaning business = nightmare. Unreliable cleaners, picky homeowners, "there's a hair on the floor" complaints, constant one-star reviews, and razor-thin margins. The lesson: Complexity is a tax on your sanity. It's only worth paying if the margins are astronomical or the ticket price is huge. If you're fighting for $100 margins in a business with 50 moving parts, you aren't an entrepreneur; you're a masochist. Stay simple. Move fast. @ShaanVP
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44 Frames@44_Frames·
@digitalshane_ The funniest part about AI coding right now is that the same model will confidently write code at 2am, then confidently tell you it's garbage at 10am. Zero memory, zero shame. It's like hiring a contractor who shows up the next day and says "who built this??"
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Shane
Shane@digitalshane_·
I'm not joking, I had Claude write a big batch of code last night. I am troubleshooting rn. I asked it to review, It said this is trash code and it needs completely reworked. We are spending credits to run in circles.
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44 Frames@44_Frames·
@om_patel5 The reviews angle is the unlock. Most cold email talks about what you offer. This reads the prospect's pain in their customers' words, then writes to that wound. Nobody fakes skepticism when your email knows what their clients complain about. 4x reply rate is conservative.
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Om Patel
Om Patel@om_patel5·
SOMEONE VIBE CODED A TOOL THAT FINDS BUSINESSES, READS THEIR REVIEWS, AND WRITES COLD EMAILS BASED ON THEIR OWN CUSTOMERS' COMPLAINTS this is insane. you type in any business type and pick a city. it scrapes every matching business off Google Maps with 30+ data fields. then it visits their actual websites and pulls verified emails, phone numbers, and every social media profile they have scraped live, not from some outdated database like other tools then the AI reads up to 50 of their Google reviews and finds their exact pain points "clients complain photos don't show the real size of properties" or "listings take too long to sell" then you tell it what YOUR business does. it cross-references your offer with their specific problems and generates a fully personalized cold email for each business. send it in 2 clicks. one by one and not bulk so it lands in the primary inbox and all of those leads land on a GPS-mapped CRM where you can draw sales territories, optimize driving routes, track your team's activity in real time, and transcribe voice notes after meetings. works in 200+ countries and with any business type. if they're on Google Maps you can find them this is the most complete lead gen tool i've ever seen AND he vibe coded the whole thing with Claude Code in 2 weeks
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44 Frames@44_Frames·
@sharbel Every power tool has a 10/90 split. 10% of users find the feature that changes how they work. 90% wonder why their output is mediocre. The gap between casual user and power user is almost always willingness to read past the getting started guide.
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Sharbel
Sharbel@sharbel·
> you open Claude Code. > you type a prompt. > it thinks for 3 seconds and gives you an answer. > you didn't know you could type "ultrathink" to make it actually think. > you didn't know "/btw" asks a question with zero context cost. > you didn't know two Claude sessions produce better code than one. > you've been using 10% of the tool. > here's the other 90%.
Sharbel@sharbel

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44 Frames@44_Frames·
@realEstateTrent The anchor tenant paradox: you want the traffic driver but not the traffic. Chick-fil-A, Planet Fitness, dollar stores — all bring bodies can torch your tenant mix. Best retail centers run on controlled scarcity. Saying no to Chick-fil-A is a flex most landlords can't pull off.
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StripMallGuy
StripMallGuy@realEstateTrent·
I’m at the airport last week and a gentleman approaches me. “Hi there - I’m on the corporate team at Chick-fil-A, been following your stuff.” Me: Stunned; not sure where it’s going. Just sort of smile and nervously say thanks. Him: “Love what you’re doing! Here’s a gift card.” Me: Ok nice that went much better than I thought 😅
StripMallGuy@realEstateTrent

Chick-fil-A is very interested in one of our properties. We told them we can’t make a deal with them no matter the rent. Why? They’re too popular. Our shopping center will instantly become a traffic and parking nightmare and the other tenants will leave.

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44 Frames@44_Frames·
@Mrplaya_ @homeservicebase Exactly — and the employee angle is underrated. The whole crew knows where the bodies are buried: which processes were held together with duct tape, which accounts are fragile, which managers were coasting. That institutional knowledge doesn't transfer in a deal room.
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Playa
Playa@Mrplaya_·
@44_Frames @homeservicebase They should be worried because most of the guys would love to work again with their former boss. And good employees are hard to find.
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Dmytro / Home Service Base
Dmytro / Home Service Base@homeservicebase·
4 years after selling NexGen HVAC & Plumbing to Wrench Group for about $150M, Ismael Valdez is back in the game. I think a lot of PE firms will be reviewing their non-compete terms now. He built a huge residential home service company in California once, he’ll do it a second time.
Dmytro / Home Service Base tweet media
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44 Frames@44_Frames·
@zodchiii The pattern is always the same. Spend 3 months doing something manually, automate it in 10 minutes, then spend the rest of the day wondering why you waited. The real cost of not automating isn't time — it's the mental tax of remembering to do the thing every single time.
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darkzodchi
darkzodchi@zodchiii·
> use Claude Code for 3 months > manually fix mistakes every day > manually make sure claude did what you asked for > no hooks > discover hooks exist > 10 minutes of setup > all of this routine is now automatic > never working same again
darkzodchi@zodchiii

x.com/i/article/2039…

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44 Frames@44_Frames·
@cgtwts 300 people building in silence while everyone else is writing blog posts about their "AI strategy." The pattern repeats: the team that ships fastest is always the one you hear about last.
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CG
CG@cgtwts·
> be kimi > team of around 300 people > barely one tenth of the people behind claude > quiet, low-key culture, people just building > no big company noise, so things move fast > builds one of the best open source models in the world > makes it cheaper to run > suddenly, anyone can actually build with AI. dream workspace for engineers who just want to build.
Rui Ma@ruima

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44 Frames@44_Frames·
@slow_developer The gap between "knows everything about my life" and "acts correctly on that knowledge" is roughly the same gap between having all the ingredients and being a good cook. Context is easy. Judgment is the hard part nobody has solved yet.
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Haider.
Haider.@slow_developer·
Sam Altman says OpenAI has two major priorities: automated researchers and AI-accelerated companies But the dream is to build an agent that monitors your computer, reads your messages, listens to meetings, and acts without being asked "it knows everything about my life"
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44 Frames@44_Frames·
@hasantoxr Genuine question: how many of these AI cold email tools have you tested that still work after month 2? The demo always looks magic. Then reply rates crater because every competitor uses the same tool with the same templates on the same leads.
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Hasan Toor
Hasan Toor@hasantoxr·
BREAKING 🚨: THIS IS THE FIRST AI SALES TOOL THAT DOES THE WHOLE JOB. PERIOD. NOT JUST DATA. NOT JUST ENRICHMENT. NOT JUST TEMPLATES. RESEARCH, VERIFICATION, AND A PERSONALIZED COLD EMAIL IN UNDER 2 MINUTES. AUTOGTM BY EXPLEE IS WHAT THE OTHERS PRETEND TO BE.
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44 Frames@44_Frames·
@_avichawla Every open-source AI tool follows the same arc: massive hype, 20K stars, then 90% of users hit a config issue on day 2 and go back to the paid product. The real moat is not the model or the features. It is making it work without reading a README.
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Avi Chawla
Avi Chawla@_avichawla·
Another blow to Anthropic! Devs built a free and better Claude alternative that: - runs locally - works with any LLM - beats it on deep research - has Cowork-like capabilities - connects to 40+ data sources - self-hosts via Docker, and more. 100% open-source (20k+ stars).
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44 Frames@44_Frames·
@sweatystartup Nobody mentions the nuance: in those first 5 conversations you are not selling the product. You are selling your conviction. The real test is whether you can describe their problem better than they can. That is when wallets open.
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Nick Huber
Nick Huber@sweatystartup·
Are you thinking about starting a business? Some might think you should begin by incorporating a company, building a website, purchasing equipment, getting insurance, working on your pricing strategy, making some ads, and setting everything up. Wrong. Your first step is to go out and find 20 potential customers willing to pay for your product or service. Once you have secured at least five paying customers who commit with cash deposits, invest in the tools, deliver the product or service and collect the remaining balance for the completed job. Then repeat the process. If you’re not starting this way, you’re wasting your time. Remember: If people truly need what you’re offering, they’ll pay you today to solve their problem. If you can’t get the money, you’re not solving a real problem. It’s time to reevaluate your business idea and try again.
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44 Frames@44_Frames·
@cryptopunk7213 Microsoft's problem isn't technical — it's structural. They can't make Copilot too good without cannibalizing Office license revenue. Anthropic has zero legacy products to protect, so they ship whatever makes the best product. Classic innovator's dilemma playing out in real time.
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Ejaaz
Ejaaz@cryptopunk7213·
sorry but anthropic is cooking microsoft, how have they fumbled this so badly microsoft owns 27% of openai, they own the entire IP for chatgpt and STILL anthropic is out-shipping them: this week we got claude cowork for windows and now every 365 app works with claude oh and microsoft’s last 2 ai products are POWERED by claude. they literally called it “microsoft cowork” this is why openai is rediverting all resources to codex anthropic is automating the entire software stack, coding process and now apps.
Ejaaz tweet media
Claude@claudeai

Microsoft 365 connectors are now available on every Claude plan. Connect Outlook, OneDrive, and SharePoint to bring your email, docs, and files into the conversation. Get started here: claude.ai/customize/conn…

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44 Frames@44_Frames·
@shawngorham The $400-500K is real but what nobody talks about is the time cost. 6-9 flips/year means you're running a full-time project management operation. Most people see the profit per deal and forget that coordinating contractors, inspections, and closings is basically a second job.
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Shawn Gorham
Shawn Gorham@shawngorham·
Here are the numbers on 3 flips I have going or sold in Q1 - will you get rich? No. But do this 6-9 times a year, sprinkle in a couple that make $100k and its a $400k - $500k a year income Would it be worth it to you?
Shawn Gorham tweet mediaShawn Gorham tweet mediaShawn Gorham tweet media
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44 Frames@44_Frames·
@svpino The hype isn't because it's new tech. It's because they solved the boring infrastructure nobody wanted to build. Most people were duct-taping Claude + scripts + cron. OpenClaw is the first real orchestration layer. That's what makes it a step-change.
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Santiago
Santiago@svpino·
Name something with more hype than OpenClaw, and I'll close my account. It genuinely looks like one of those things that happen once in a long time and fundamentally change the game. So many platforms, ideas, offerings, and variations come out every day! These guys are now offering it for free with Gemma 4, Google's latest open model. This genie is out of the bottle.
atomicbot.ai@atomicbot_ai

Running OpenClaw with Gemma 4🦞 Free Open Source Local Model Device: MacBook Air M4 16Gb

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44 Frames@44_Frames·
@startupideaspod Building collapsed. Distribution didn't. You can ship a product in an hour but "first customer by 10am" only works if you already have the audience. Most people are still at month 6 trying to get anyone to notice the thing they built in 45 minutes.
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