Feels like we've entered the builder phase of the market cycle.
A lot of the defining DeFi protocols did not start in peak euphoria. They started when attention was low, money was tighter, and only the obsessive people kept going.
@bradmillscan fwiw my experience has been pretty different.
this was the first time Hermes actually gave me real issues. OpenClaw broke for me multiple times a week.
also, Hermes team pushed an update pretty fast, which matters.
people keep talking about parallelizing agent work.
personally I use:
prompt
coffee
prompt
lunch
prompt
youtube
prompt
I've never been more productive in my life
Don't really get the humanoid robot hype for factories.
If you want an autonomous factory, the human form is probably one of the least efficient designs imaginable.
You can already build machinery that is faster, more accurate, and better suited to the task.
We just wrapped what began as an 8-hour challenge - and it ran for 200 hours without a failure
Shoutout to the team for the hardcore engineering behind F.03 and the robust Helix models powering it
Builder note:
Trying to make my personal AI setup more boring, not more magical.
Clear agent roles. Pinned models. Scheduled checks. Smoke tests.
If it touches my workflow every day, it deserves production hygiene.
Otherwise it is just a fancy habit.
Good step!
Still crazy it took crypto this long to admit that users should understand what they are signing.
We should not stop at signing. Every crypto action should be explained user first, not dev or machine-code first.
Clear Signing for hardware wallets is a non-negotiable standard.
It is one of our top priorities this year as we collaborate with the @ethereumfndn and our ecosystem partners.
We are executing an aggressive roadmap to ensure that you never have to sign a transaction you don't fully understand. Let’s do this.
After 2 years, 2 months and 8 days, my time at @socketprotocol comes to an end.
Most of that time was spent working on @bungeeexchange, trying to make crypto UX less painful, day in day out.
Grateful for the people, and wishing the team all the best for what comes next.
The next useful AI products won't all be chatboxes.
A lot of them will be pages/apps that learn from expensive edge cases, cache verified judgment, and get cheaper + better for every similar user after that.
The win isn't more tokens. It's using tokens better across users.