A dude who fixes phones for a living built himself an actual Jarvis.
I'm not saying "like Jarvis." I'm saying his room wakes up at 5:40 AM and starts doing things by itself.
Screens turn on. Invoices go out. Calendar sorts itself. Clients get reminders he never wrote. He's not even in the room yet.
He can't code. At all. He talked to AI for one weekend and told it what he wants. That's it. The AI built everything.
Now he has an app making $30,000 a month and a system that runs his entire life while he sits there deciding what to do with his day.
He quit fixing phones two months ago.
Every single person who's seen his setup says the same thing.
"I want one."
Yeah. Me too.
It's free. One evening to set up.
Buy a red car and within a week, red cars are suddenly everywhere. Same number on the road as last month. Your brain just decided red matters to you now, so it quit letting them blur past and started flagging every single one. The same switch is running your whole life.
Scientists named that little glitch the frequency illusion, and the clip above is the same effect dressed up as physics. A row of weights hangs from one string, each a different length, so each likes to swing at its own speed. Wiggle the bar at the right pace and only the weight that matches it takes off, swinging wild, while the rest barely budge. That is resonance. It is also how a radio works: the dial locks onto one station out of the thousands flying through the air and ignores the rest.
Your focus tunes the exact same way, and it can be ruthless about what it throws out. In a famous Harvard study, people watched a short clip and counted how many times a basketball got passed around. Easy enough. Around half of them never noticed the woman in a full gorilla suit who strolled into the middle of the players, faced the camera, and beat her chest for a solid nine seconds. Nine out of ten people are sure they would have caught it. They are usually wrong.
So the tweet is partly right. Your brain does run a filter that picks what gets through to you. Self-help says you can aim that filter like a wish and pull money or love straight to your door. The truth is closer to a sleepy bouncer than a genie. Its whole job is to notice what you keep staring at and wave more of it through. You are finally seeing the red cars that were there the entire time.
The same filter has a darker setting. In depression and anxiety, it gets stuck on the bad stuff, the threats and the losses, and struggles to look away, which quietly feeds the mood that jammed it there to begin with. There is research into gently coaching that filter back toward calmer things. The results are mixed so far, but the idea holds.
Whatever you keep pointing your attention at really does grow louder in your world. Inside your own skull, a machine decides what you see, running on whatever you keep feeding it. The ball that swings is the one you keep tapping in rhythm.
I made a second version of the transformation video.
This time I moved the character into a real environment instead of using a plain white background.
I also changed the opening and showed the final transformation result first. The overall flow feels much stronger now.
Full workflow + prompts:
https://t.co/GtMflcOvf7
The interesting part is that this type of video is much easier to make than it looks.
You only need a base image, then generate the next keyframe through simple edits or outfit changes on the canvas.
The entire transformation sequence is built from those keyframes.
So I found this indie game with no objectives, no timers and no pressure - just you, your dog & the perfect campsite
- Customize your car & drive to cozy locations
- Set up tents, lanterns & decor freely
- Your dog reacts to everything around you
It's Called I Know a Spot
Really impressive result! My first video done on @get_artcraft turned out to be really amazing!
This time it really follows the design of the township I’ve generated. Prompt below: 👇
THIS GUY HAD OPUS 4.8 BUILD A FULL LEAGUE OF LEGENDS CLONE IN UNDER A DAY AND CALLED IT "LMAO"
temu league of legends, fully playable, multiplayer, and all built by claude
ALL the art is claude too
he had claude generate every character, animation, and background as SVG code
then converted them to procedural canvas for smooth animation. used dedicated sub-agents for each champion
the tech stack: typescript, react, canvas, and partykit for multiplayer
the workflow:
> used /goal to kick off the entire project
> ultracode workflows for big tasks like optimization
> /goal again to queue up lists of bug fixes
> treated claude like a dev team
the original champion names claude came up with:
the original champion names claude came up with: Teehee" instead of Teemo. "CtrlAltDefeat" as a champion name. he had to run through and clean them all up so nothing infringed on riot's IP��
claude even built the bots on its own with "chill," "normal," and "sweaty" difficulty levels
the token bill was 2.7 billion total tokens consumed. mostly cache reads. 15.5 million actual output tokens. would have cost roughly $6,600 at list price but he just used his pro max subscriptions
people are already benchmarking claude by how good of a game clone it can build
game developers are watching someone build a multiplayer MOBA in a day with zero art skills and zero game dev experience
2026 is wild (and its going to get even wilder)
I don’t think AI “doesn’t work.”
AI that feels fake doesn’t work.
This app is getting ~90k downloads/month and doing $35k+/month mostly from viral AI clips.
And from my experience, almost every “revenue estimate” tool for apps is wrong when it comes to organic traffic. Usually the real revenue is 1.5x–4x higher.
I’ve already started using Arcads to build workflows for AI transformation videos for my weight loss app.
The workflow is honestly simple:
> Generate avatars with GPT Images 2.0 using JSON prompts
> Download viral TikTok transformation videos
> Use Kling Motion Control
> Recreate the same style with a different influencer
People underestimate how far AI UGC has already gone.
Big fan of teaching more people the basics of using Claude Code in an accessible way.
So much of the world has not yet used agents. There's a lot of opportunity to level the playing field and expand access.
People have asked How To Keep AI Character Consistency so here’s a Simple Guide
AI consistency is not about using the same prompt every time.
It’s about keeping the character’s DNA locked while only changing the scene, clothing, pose, or camera.
HERE ARE THE 4 THINGS YOU NEED TO KNOW🧵:
OpenPets support is coming in Tiny World Builder -- have your little pets running around your worlds and link them up via API / MCP to your agent harness of choice!
AI pixel art workflows are getting interesting.
I used a single forest platformer screenshot as a reference and tried turning it into reusable game assets with GPT Image 2.0.
Prompt below 👇