I just built an open source Claude Code clone from scratch I call it Pegasus
It's a full terminal AI coding agent that runs locally. Persistent memory across sessions, self-improving skills, native context compacting, plan mode, interactive model picker, reasoning/thinking mode the whole thing
What makes it different? It actually learns. Every time you use it, it saves what worked as reusable skills and rembers your preferences, your stack, your conventions. So the more you code with it, the sharper it gets No re explaining yourself every session.
Built it because I wanted something that felt like Claude Code but fully mine hackable, private, running on my own backend.
But right now have so many bugs so i need to fix it
Its just a preview
I just built an open source Claude Code clone from scratch I call it Pegasus
It's a full terminal AI coding agent that runs locally. Persistent memory across sessions, self-improving skills, native context compacting, plan mode, interactive model picker, reasoning/thinking mode the whole thing
What makes it different? It actually learns. Every time you use it, it saves what worked as reusable skills and rembers your preferences, your stack, your conventions. So the more you code with it, the sharper it gets No re explaining yourself every session.
Built it because I wanted something that felt like Claude Code but fully mine hackable, private, running on my own backend.
But right now have so many bugs so i need to fix it
Its just a preview
Free Mint | Disclosure Visitors (UAP8)
Supply: 999
- Generate random 32-byte salt and instantly computes your commitment using the exact formula from the contract: keccak256(abi.encode(account, salt, chainId, address(this)))
- Copy both values and store your salt somewhere safe (notes app, text file). You'll need it again in step 4.
- Go to Etherscan → Write Contract → call commit() with the commitment hash, value = 0 ETH.
- Wait ~13 blocks (~3 minutes), then call revealAndMint() with your salt and a cellId of your choice (0–999). Pick a cell number you think is less popular to reduce the chance of a LaneTaken failure.
https://t.co/qKMBydJxQ8