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SuddenSharpPain
367 posts

SuddenSharpPain
@SuddenSharpPain
Consigliere in the pod shop mafia, Wags with a little less degeneracy. Former qwant and master of maximizing return-free risk. My preferred IDE is Whatsapp
Sumali Ağustos 2020
294 Sinusundan145 Mga Tagasunod

@__paleologo Gappy, are you in Hong Kong? Go outside of Kowloon and Central, and it looks like a completely different city. Experience the seafood in Sai Kung or head out to Repulse Bag.
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@moneyfetishist Did it during COVID. Worked well. Cheaper than rent and breakfast buffet included every morning (got boring fast). Only problem is laundry, but there was a laundromat I could drop off clothes nearby. Brought in my own furniture and microwave and took it away after.
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genuine question : I am thinking about this for my next move
has anyone here ever lived in a hotel long term? not a week or month. I mean actually lived there. like Udo Lindenberg has been living in the Hotel Atlantic in Hamburg for over 30 years type of situation
because the more I think about it the more it makes sense to me financially and logistically. no furniture. no maintenance. no utility contracts. no dealing with landlords or property management. cleaning handled. laundry handled. food available 24/7. gym and amenities included. you check in and your entire life is operationally managed by someone else from that point forward
and from a tax perspective I am fairly certain I can write off a hotel as a business expense significantly better than I can write off rent depending on how the structure is set up. if you are travelling between cities for work and your “primary residence” is a hotel in the city where your business operates the deductibility argument is substantially cleaner than trying to write off a portion of a flat. obviously depends on jurisdiction and how aggressive your accountant is willing to be but the structure seems favourable
I am not talking about living in a Holiday Inn. I am talking about a proper long term rate at a good hotel where they know you and you have your own setup and it actually becomes your home
if anyone has done this or is currently doing this I want to hear about it. what was the rate structure like long term.? did it actually work lifestyle wise or did it get depressing after a while? how did you handle mail and residency? was the tax treatment actually better than renting?
genuinely curious. I am actually considering this.
let me know
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@andersonsview @jarodmitchellx $100? Is that a placeholder or is that the actual price?
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@NielsRogge @openclaw Opus-distill will respond with 100 tokens (3.3s @ 30tok/s). Qwen will generating 3000 tokens of overthinking (100s at the same 30 tok/s)
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@NielsRogge @openclaw Check how many tokens it's generating to make a response. The number will be stupid high. I was having the same issue before I switched to the opus-distilled version of qwen3.5
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Wtf... Qwen3.5-35B-A3B took 3 minutes (!!) to answer my simple question, "What's on my calendar today?" via @openclaw
I don't know what these local LLM fellas are running on, but a DGX Spark sure is not the best thing
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@sudoingX Beautiful. Ran into that issue trying to use Hermes agent with a local model and migrating from openclaw. Will try again.
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if you already have hermes configured nothing changes. this is for new users setting up local models for the first time. the setup flow should meet you where you are not assume what you want based on what else is on your machine.
github.com/NousResearch/h…
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hey if you're setting up hermes agent with a local model for the first time, i just opened my third PR to make it easier.
when you point hermes agent at your local server during setup it now probes the endpoint and auto-detects your model. it finds what's running and asks you to confirm.
and on fresh installs the setup wizard now triggers properly even if you have claude code or other tools installed on your machine. before this hermes agent would find those external credentials and skip onboarding entirely. you'd never get asked how you want to use it.
tested on a my 3090 node with llama.cpp and locally with claude code installed. both paths work.

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Day 7 of 30: email classification and triaging
x.com/SuddenSharpPai…
SuddenSharpPain@SuddenSharpPain
I gave my AI assistant access to my email inbox. It now triages every unread email automatically, classifying, archiving noise, and flagging what actually needs my attention. Here's how I built it in an afternoon 🧵
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Day 6 of 30: Restaurant reservations straight to calendar
x.com/SuddenSharpPai…
SuddenSharpPain@SuddenSharpPain
I built a system that reads my restaurant reservation emails and automatically adds them to my to-do list. Here's how it works. 🧵 Day 6/30 of building my personal AI assistant with @OpenClaw_AI
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I'm documenting every automation I build for 30 days.
Day 7/30, AI email triage.
Follow along if you want to see what's possible when your AI assistant actually has access to your life.
What would you automate first? 👇
#buildinpublic #AI #automation #productivity
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@openclaw_ai 30 days. 30 automations. All built with plain English instructions.
Day 1: morning briefing
Day 2: podcast summariser
Day 3: news digest
Day 4: financial dashboard
Day 5: CC payment reminder
Day 6: reservation tracker <- you are here
Follow along 👇 @OpenClaw_AI
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@openclaw_ai The whole thing runs automatically at 10 past every hour.
If nothing changed -> complete silence.
If a new reservation landed -> I get a WhatsApp message with the diff.
Zero inbox management. Zero manual todo entries. It just works.
#automation #productivityhacks
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I built a system that reads my restaurant reservation emails and automatically adds them to my to-do list.
Here's how it works. 🧵
Day 6/30 of building my personal AI assistant with @OpenClaw_AI
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