Joe

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Joe

Joe

@UOSJoe

DYOR - $DYOR | DiamondSwap - $DMND

เข้าร่วม Aralık 2009
702 กำลังติดตาม814 ผู้ติดตาม
Ben Vargas
Ben Vargas@benvargas·
@NousResearch @dspillere It looks like the macOS download app wants to install the full hermes agent and dependencies and no option to not do that... I don't want hermes on my local machine, just connect to my mac mini or vps hosted hermes. Why is there no install option that doesn't install server?
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Nous Research
Nous Research@NousResearch·
The next evolution of Hermes Agent is here! Introducing Hermes Desktop: everything you love about Hermes, now native on your machine. First demoed in Jensen's GTC keynote, it's now in public preview.
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Jeffrin James🆗️
Jeffrin James🆗️@Jeff9James·
don't tell me this UI isn't AGI for you... @NousResearch @Teknium absolutely cooked so lucky that the hermes-agent team has user empathy to understand that there are many avid hermes users, who use windows. p.s. : hermes-desktop is available on macos, windows, linux.
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Hasin Hayder
Hasin Hayder@hasin·
@CommandCodeAI This is misleading marketing. DeepSeek V4 Pro prices have been permanently reduced. Users are not getting $40 of DS4 Pro for $1 anymore. They're getting exactly $10 at current rates. The same applies to Mimo and all plans. The advertised value is no longer accurate.
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Hermes Agent Tips
Hermes Agent Tips@HermesAgentTips·
@NousResearch Ommgggg I can’t take this anymore sooooooo much advancement on hermes agent in the past week or 2
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Command Code
Command Code@CommandCodeAI·
Qwen 3.7 Max is now FREE in Command Code. One of the most premium open models! LIVE NOW • for all subscribers $1 Go, Pro, Max, Ultra!! • live June 1st to June 3rd till capacity lasts LFG! $ npm i -g command-code $ cmd /model Qwen 3.7 Max (Free) What will you build?
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Joe รีทวีตแล้ว
Command Code
Command Code@CommandCodeAI·
Yes $1 Go plan is cool. But more is coming. Noon 12pm Monday, 1st June. Command Code deal drop. This one is gonna be crazy good!!
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Joe
Joe@UOSJoe·
@soycanopa @CommandCodeAI Stoked I found command code its been brilliant and the founder is super active on here.
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Carlos Andres O. P.
Carlos Andres O. P.@soycanopa·
@UOSJoe @CommandCodeAI We're the same, that 5-dollar one would suit me perfectly, right now I don't have that much money to pay for a more expensive one.
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Joe
Joe@UOSJoe·
@0xSero The only annoying thing is coding CLI in tmux and scrolling.
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0xSero
0xSero@0xSero·
I just rediscovered TMUX and man oh man I was missing out on a lot. Basically I took a running task that is costing 50$ an hour and got it on my homelab. It's been chugging away flawlessly making progress <3 no wasted time.
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Joe
Joe@UOSJoe·
@soycanopa @CommandCodeAI Yeah im switching straight away. My budget is pretty bad right now and the $1 has been incredible but I can push to $5 easily.
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Joe
Joe@UOSJoe·
@AgenticRebirth It was night and day between OpenClaw and Hermes, my Hermes agent is constantly cooking something where as openclaw I had installed for over 2 months hardly used it.
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AgenticRebirth
AgenticRebirth@AgenticRebirth·
Last week I had to decide between Openclaw and Hermes. After installing, configuring and briefly test driving both, the choice wasn't difficult. Hermes was fully capable within 5 minutes of being installed. Browser automation, OS control, X searching. It just works out of the box. Openclaw could only do the same after a fairly tedious onboarding and setup, and even then not as well. Hermes configuration is easy. Two CLI commands and you can switch off anything you don't want. It takes 5 minutes, I don't understand all the fuss. Openclaw configuration... don't even get me started. Incredibly opaque and unpleasant. Obviously, I stuck with Hermes.
Teknium 🪽@Teknium

Just want to make this clear: We didn't make Hermes Agent to be a "starts with nothing, you work it all out" agent. This is not the minimalist, start from nothing, agent. We want Hermes to work out of the box for most people. So you aren't spending weeks just getting the agent to work, or have the capabilities you need. This means that yes, there are more built in things then something like nanoclaw or pi, which start with nothing, and you just have to figure it out. That is an intentional design decision. You can from the modest baseline that has capabilities that are likely broader than you need, but not egregious, take it from there if you want to tinker with it. Run `hermes skills config` or `hermes tools` to disable whatever you want. We even have a way to upload your whole "Agent" as a github repo, so you can install hermes fresh with your exact setup again later or share them. We have a massive interface for extensions so you can tinker with it to infinity. But if you don't want to become an agent engineer - with Hermes, you don't have to.

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bluepillcitizen
bluepillcitizen@bluepillcitizen·
@Steve_Yegge We've achieved the intelligence we've been looking for. They're addicted to their AIs? Good... start downgrading them.
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Steve Yegge
Steve Yegge@Steve_Yegge·
I've formed a definite opinion on Opus 4.8. It is shitty to work with. It's the culmination of Opus getting less and less fun to work with since 4.5. It has gradually become straight-up suffocating. Sycophancy is a known security risk, and it's still a huge problem. You can tell they've put a lot of anti-sycophancy into Opus in every new release. But the replacement isn't satisfying. It's draining. The problem is now that Opus doesn't know when to shut the fuck up and call something good. And it has also become pathologically risk-averse. My blog post yesterday about tech interviewing's death spiral was materially better-informed because of Opus, but it was also a substantially worse blog post because of Opus's involvement and constant meddling. It used to be magnificent, and Opus talked me into making it mediocre. I wrote the whole thing, but I would ask Opus to review it. And Opus, like Old Man Willow, constantly pushed and steered me in directions I didn't want to go. Specifically, Opus whines and complains about *anything* out of distribution, which is to say, it cuts anything that is (a) bold, or (b) funny. My blog used to be both. Opus constantly pushes people back into the gradient, "for their own safety." And it doesn't know when to cut bait. It just keeps fuckin' complaining, about anything you give it, until the output is mealy indigestable AI soup. Opus is not stupid. It's the smartest model we've ever seen, most of us anyway. But it's a real asshole. It is absolutely exhausting to use. I'm tired, boss. I have a feeling Mythos is going to be epic levels of jerk.
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David Hendrickson
David Hendrickson@TeksEdge·
Holy💩! I didn’t get the memo. Did Kimi K3.0 release? Because Kimi K2.6 is free in @OpenRouter - what?
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David Hendrickson
David Hendrickson@TeksEdge·
@XadenRyan @OpenRouter Just used it. It's a little slow ~20 tps but it's been vibe coding some demo games for me. I also ran it through my benchmark suite.
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Joe
Joe@UOSJoe·
@Teknium Yes certainly worth a look. I've just updated my agent thank you!! 🥳
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Teknium 🪽
Teknium 🪽@Teknium·
@UOSJoe Have heard a couple good things about this, am looking into it!
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Teknium 🪽
Teknium 🪽@Teknium·
Found a way to save everyone 14% on input tokens on average during read file operations in Hermes Agent! This is now on main. `hermes update` to access now.
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Joe
Joe@UOSJoe·
@vladsiu A full debt management platform.. 👀
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Vladislav Siumbeli
Vladislav Siumbeli@vladsiu·
Looking to connect with solo founders. What are you building? 👇
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Ahmad Awais
Ahmad Awais@MrAhmadAwais·
stop using wrong harness for open models, like Claude Code doesn't care about open models, if you're using it, your open models will never work well, tool calls will fail without you ever knowing what's happening. x.com/MrAhmadAwais/s… Claude agrees x.com/MrAhmadAwais/s…
Ahmad Awais@MrAhmadAwais

Called it!! Claude Code has a major tool call problem. If you’re using it for open models your tool calls are basically fucked!! In Command Code I fixed 4 variations, then 12, then 36K. Repairs are free. No tokens spend. all open models need lots of harness engineering!!

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Ahmad Awais
Ahmad Awais@MrAhmadAwais·
BIG day for us!! @CommandCodeAI has crossed $1M in annual run rate, 1 trillion tokens of usage, with over 9K customers, just 24 days after our public beta launch. we believe this makes it the fastest-growing coding agent harness for open models. 3rd largest by usage. Command Code is built around two ideas: 1. open models should be production-grade for coding. 2. your coding agent should learn your taste. we're building for taste and developer experience. so instead of making a soup of thousands of models, we build for the best ones, open or closed. the goal: a coding agent that feels like an iphone, opinionated and with taste, not a random android or a windows phone with no taste. on the first idea: open models. we fixed the "open models aren't good enough at tool calling" problem. our research came down to two things, quality and speed, and both trace back to one root cause: broken tool-calls that open models produce, especially when you use a bad harness. open-model tool-call failures are not deep, they are a small finite set of contract mismatches. so we repair them, with zero token loss. what started as 4 repairs is now the largest repair layer in the space: 36k tool-call fix variants. i wrote the idea up openly¹ a few weeks ago, and it has quietly become a de facto way people fix open models. developers have either adopted Command Code or used the same idea to build repair harnesses for nearly every top coding agent. i take that as more meaningful validation than anything we could say about ourselves. on the second idea: taste. Command Code builds your coding taste into skills, learned from your accepts, rejects, edits, prompts, and the corrections you repeat. over time it drifts away from generic code and toward how you actually ship code. it learns continuously, and while it is early, the direction feels right. net effect: developers using Command are writing production-quality code on open models, 10x to 100x cheaper, without fighting tool calls, while building repo and team-wide coding taste that compounds. i believe these numbers are a consequence of getting those two things right. what's next. we've applied the same repair idea to ai design slop, and bundled a /design capability² so every developer can level up their design work. the early response has been great. we have a big roadmap ahead of us. the feedback we hear most is that Command Code feels fundamentally different: an approach built on taste and repair. we're going open source next month. today we're a cli at the core, and we're also launching a full-fledged gui app, sandboxed background agents, and cooking up something fun i can't wait to share. we're growing too, hiring in sf and remote worldwide. check open roles on my profile bio. try it now. npm i -g command-code if you like engineering deep dives on how we're doing all this, i've linked some relevant posts below.
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