⚡Forum you should join to become a good Developer in 2022⚡
I shared 5 communities where you can quickly get your issues fixed.
/ thread 🧵🧶
#web3#100DaysOfCode
built supermcp: a mac app + MCP server that lets claude/cursor/windsurf read reddit, x, linkedin and more, no API keys. it uses your own logged-in chrome session locally, read-only, nothing leaves your machine. mac apple silicon only, free up to 100/day.
https://t.co/teveZEDa4w
Reddit API: $0.40 per 1K requests
Twitter API: $100/month minimum just to READ
Google Trends: no official API at all
I got tired of paying for data I can already see in my browser. So I built SuperMCP.
🧵
It's on PyPI now.
If you use Claude Code or Cursor and want Reddit/Twitter/Trends data without API bills:
https://t.co/e2fCgdIeRU
What data sources do you wish your AI tools had access to?
I tried doing this the "right way" first.
Registered a Reddit OAuth app. Got rate limited after 10 requests. Realized my AI agent would burn through the paid tier in one conversation.
Then I thought: why not just use the Chrome session I already have?
What this actually looks like:
Me: "search Reddit for posts about invoice automation for freelancers. what are people complaining about?"
Claude pulls real threads, reads comments, summarizes pain points. I never leave my terminal.
3 tools, all via MCP:
→ Search Reddit, read full threads + comments
→ Search Twitter, get reply chains
→ Google Trends by region
→ Google News search + headlines
Works with Claude Code, Cursor, Windsurf, or anything that speaks MCP.
The idea was stupid simple.
You're already logged into Reddit and Twitter in Chrome. Your cookies are sitting right there on disk.
SuperMCP reads those cookies locally, spins up a headless browser, and browses as you. Your AI tools get the data. No API keys. No OAuth.
it's exhausting. someone left their ChatGPT prompt at the bottom of a performance review last week.
"Do you want a more formal or scathing response?" 674 people recognized that story. because they've seen it
🧵 on why AI emails are eroding workplace trust faster than we realize
a teacher said this about students using AI for simple emails:
"i wish they trusted themselves enough to write their own words."
that's not about AI. that's about confidence.
somewhere we convinced everyone their voice isn't good enough.