T1000
1.7K posts

T1000
@teeRex247
Sol Dev. vibe coding. Trench MEME Millionaire. Not Financial Advice










Claude code source code has been leaked via a map file in their npm registry! Code: …a8527898604c1bbb12468b1581d95e.r2.dev/src.zip








My friend keeps sending Reels about making money online on Polymarket So I sent him a screenshot of my Claude bot pulling $480 overnight on Polymarket. He hasn’t sent me a Reel since. One Claude agent split into four smaller agents - Weather, Short-Term Markets, Politics, and Sports. Zero manual trades. Everything automated. The edge is almost embarrassing. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration runs a multi-billion-dollar forecasting network - satellites, ocean sensors, atmospheric models - updating probabilities every few hours. Forecast accuracy at 24 - 48 hours? Around 94%. Meanwhile Polymarket weather brackets are often priced by people checking weather apps between scrolling social media. Day 2: NOAA model update shows Chicago temperatures likely falling below 35°F with 93% probability. The bracket is still trading at 8¢. My Claude agent buys before the market notices. $170 → $710 Day 7: NOAA models flag a humidity spike in Atlanta nearly 20 hours before most weather apps adjust their forecasts. Three brackets sitting below 11¢. The agent takes all three. $710 → $1,060 Day 14: New York overnight temperatures land exactly where NOAA predicted two days earlier. The agent executes 7 trades across three cities. Most close green. $1,060 → $2,540 Day 21: Seattle rain bands, Dallas cold air, Miami heat index - all resolve in the same night. The agent runs 12 trades while I’m asleep. That’s the $480 screenshot I sent my friend. $2,540 → $3,900 The setup is simple: Claude agent - runs 24/7 on my laptop, scans forecast updates and trades automatically NOAA scanner - free government forecast data Telegram - every trade notification hits my phone instantly After a few weeks the numbers looked like this: 1,100+ trades ~89% win rate $170 → $3,900 All because a supercomputer predicts the weather… …and most markets react too slowly.




