A lot of updates go unnoticed because they happen behind the scenes
The latest release from @quipnetwork is one of those
Making node deployment, monitoring, security configuration and maintenance simpler may not generate headlines, but it’s exactly the kind of work that improves the experience for everyone running infrastructure
Small improvements compound over time
New Quip Node Manager build just released:
‣ Full stack in one command: node, dashboard, database
‣ Optional TLS, configured in-app
‣ Embedded dashboard
‣ Single health status
‣ Auto-updating images
Full changelog + downloads:
https://t.co/39mR5bM6F6
Most AI tools stop at giving answers
What makes @TheARCTERMINAL interesting is what you can actually do after getting those answers
You can research new topics, analyze projects, organize information, manage workflows and keep everything connected inside the same environment
The goal isn’t just to chat with AI
It’s to turn AI into something that can actively support the way you work every day
A lot of projects talk about security
Very few are thinking about what security might need to look like 5 or 10 years from now
That’s part of what makes the Vault system from @quipnetwork interesting
It’s not just about storing assets
It’s about creating infrastructure designed for a future where quantum resistant protection could become increasingly important
Building for tomorrow’s challenges today is a different mindset entirely
Most AI tools stop at giving answers
What makes @TheARCTERMINAL interesting is what you can actually do after getting those answers
You can research new topics, analyze projects, organize information, manage workflows and keep everything connected inside the same environment
The goal isn’t just to chat with AI
It’s to turn AI into something that can actively support the way you work every day
Most AI tools are built for tasks.
ARC is built for projects.
There is a difference.
A task ends when you close the tab.
A project has threads, decisions, context, and history that compound over time.
ARC was designed for the second one.
Are we finally getting the first proper onchain operating system?
@TheARCTERMINAL combines AI agents + browser-native experience + zero knowledge privacy
No more trusting apps with your keys. No more fragmented wallets
This feels like the next layer
What do you think.. game changer or just another AI wrapper? 👇
A lot of projects talk about security
Very few are thinking about what security might need to look like 5 or 10 years from now
That’s part of what makes the Vault system from @quipnetwork interesting
It’s not just about storing assets
It’s about creating infrastructure designed for a future where quantum resistant protection could become increasingly important
Building for tomorrow’s challenges today is a different mindset entirely
Are we finally getting the first proper onchain operating system?
@TheARCTERMINAL combines AI agents + browser-native experience + zero knowledge privacy
No more trusting apps with your keys. No more fragmented wallets
This feels like the next layer
What do you think.. game changer or just another AI wrapper? 👇
A lot of people look at @quipnetwork and immediately focus on the airdrop
What keeps me interested is the amount of different systems already being built around the ecosystem
Vaults, nodes, quantum resistant security, compute infrastructure, community rewards…
It feels like each piece is designed to strengthen the others rather than exist as a standalone feature
That’s usually where the strongest ecosystems come from
Most people spend half their day jumping between tools
Research in one place
Files in another
AI somewhere else
What I find interesting about @TheARCTERMINAL is the idea of bringing everything into one connected environment instead
Less switching
More context
And AI that can actually understand what you’re working on over time