Holy Shxt... Humans have officially become the bottleneck.
I built a system around Andrej Karpathy's LLM Wiki.
Every employee's responsibilities, workflows, and operational context are captured in the LLM Wiki, allowing the system to understand how work is organized before execution begins.
From a digital twin workspace, I can issue a single command, and the system decomposes it into specialized skills for each business function. Each skill handles its domain, then hands off its output to the next agent until the workflow is complete.
Codex is the default execution engine, while OpenClaw and Hermes are accessed through a bridge whenever they're better suited for a task.
For operations requiring security permissions, a human simply approves the request, and the agents take over from there.
It feels like the human role is shifting from doing the work to managing, approving, and supervising the system.
Now I can operate the company's infrastructure from anywhere.
We've put together a short history of how Claude Code came to be, told by the people who built it and the early users who helped make it what it is today.
https://t.co/0gXEPID8lh
New Anthropic research: A global workspace in language models.
Of everything happening in your brain right now, only a tiny fraction is consciously accessible—thoughts you can describe, hold in mind, and reason with.
We found a strikingly similar divide inside Claude.
My biggest luxury over the past 13 years has been never having to set an alarm, and always keeping my phone on silent. I only return calls when I notice I've missed them, and I only answer the phone if we've previously agreed on a specific time to talk.