I got tired of generic walking tours, so I built my own: type any city → get a custom walking route with real stops and a story written for each one. Free, no signup → https://t.co/92QiPwEUPM
@ProductHunt@vercel A custom walking tour site! Put in your interests, how long you want to walk, and it’ll spit out a custom tour for you
https://t.co/AkKxO9hwii
Human civilization is about to gain trillions of extra (200+ IQ) minds.
For all of history, progress was limited by the tiny number of genius level humans alive at any moment.
A few thousand extraordinary minds per generation had to push the entire species forward.
One Einstein.
One Newton.
One Tesla.
One Turing.
One von Neumann.
One Feynman.
Civilization was bottlenecked by biology,
by lifespan,
by education speed,
by attention,
by memory,
by fatigue,
by the number of rare geniuses nature happened to produce.
That bottleneck will soon be obliterated. To achieve this asap, we need to build as many chips and data centers as possible, as fast as possible.
The 2030s will not be just very advanced. They will be unreal. Well beyond Star Trek level.
Everyone is always rooting for you. Your parents want you to be a great son. Wife wants you to be a great husband. Your boss wants you to be a slam dunk hire. Every first date you’ve ever been on they’ve been rooting for you to get laid. Every time you started to tell a joke people hoped it would have a hilarious punch line. Your proximity to anyone is a reflection of themself, meaning the deck is never stacked against you, and your failures are completely your own
How did I run out of 5.3-codex-spark credits with only a few calls to it? I haven’t used it for months until today? Anyone else having issues rn
@OpenAIDevs@OpenAI@thsottiaux
So I've been toying with a society simulator that builds on a bunch of AI frameworks I've been working on. There is one guy in society who is an absolute menace
So I've been toying with a society simulator that builds on a bunch of AI frameworks I've been working on. There is one guy in society who is an absolute menace
My laptop has become a “satellite device” since I started using Codex from my phone. And my Mac mini has become the “home.” It’s clunky, but the end state feels more like how we’re going to be working in the near future:
I’m currently running the Codex app on 2 devices:
1. my MacBook
2. my Mac mini
My laptop isn’t reliably connected to Wi-Fi enough, so I keep a Mac mini on my desk that is always connected.
When I kick off new threads from my phone, I start them on the Mac mini. When I’m working from my desk, I run them there too.
The cool part is that I’ve added my MacBook and Mac mini as connected devices to each other. That means I can start and resume threads from either device. So if I’m in a meeting but want to continue a thread on my laptop that was started on my Mac mini, I can do that.
I’ve also set up mutual SSH for Mac mini <> MacBook, so files are easy to access from either side. It’s not fully seamless yet, but the model works.
What this means:
- I have an always-on Codex that is accessible from my phone, with its own dev environment
- All threads are always accessible from any of the 3 devices
- I can run heartbeat threads that stay on 24/7
It’s a little makeshift today, but the shape of it feels very real to me: Codex is no longer tied to whichever computer happens to be open in front of me. It starts to feel like something I can stay connected to across whatever device I’m using.
Turn any walk into a story.
iWander is live. Browse 8 ready-to-walk tours, or make your own — pick a city, a few interests, and how long you want to walk.
Then follow it stop by stop: stories, photos, maps, directions.
A few starter walks if you want to preview one before making your own:
Toronto: https://t.co/22atTQIECJ
New Orleans: https://t.co/0lUtkDtPIN
Paris: https://t.co/QTcfKBEuRW
Chicago architecture: https://t.co/ZNRnf4IGAe
Turn any walk into a story.
iWander is live. Browse 8 ready-to-walk tours, or make your own — pick a city, a few interests, and how long you want to walk.
Then follow it stop by stop: stories, photos, maps, directions.
One of the first real walks happened in Toronto after a night out.
It turned a normal walk home into a route through hidden gems — the kind of path a local said he would have picked himself.
That’s the goal: useful for visitors, natural enough for locals.
Attitude is a choice.
Gratitude is a discipline.
Bitterness is expensive.
Nobody accidentally has a great attitude.
Nobody stumbles into gratitude.
And nobody means to end up bitter, it just quietly moves in when you stop choosing something better.
Guard your peace like it cost you something.
Because it did.