The last time I generated an image in ChatGPT, it took 95 seconds.
It’s 2025. I didn’t want to wait that long.
That’s why I built @imageosai
It's
⚡ 6x faster than ChatGPT
🖼 Model agnostic (includes: Nano Banana, Seedream)
💸 100% free (for now).
download and lmk how you go
I’ve spent thousands of hours working with AI agents across a lot of different setups.
One problem keeps coming up: Where do you put the stuff you want your agents to remember?
Skills, markdown docs, transcripts, reusable code, images, bookmarks, tweets, YouTube videos, articles, notes, project context.
Sure you can throw it into Obsidian, Notion, GitHub, or a vector database.
But most of those come with setup, structure, or a learning curve.
So I’m building something much simpler:
A lightweight memory bank for your AI agents.
- No database setup.
- No infrastructure.
- No complicated workflows.
Just an easy way to share useful data with whatever agent you’re using: ChatGPT, Claude, Claude Code, Codex, or anything else.
If you’ve ever done useful work with AI and then thought “where do I save this so I can use it again?”, this is probably for you.
I’m looking for a few early beta testers.
Drop a comment or send me a message and I’ll get in touch.
Introducing Claude Fable 5: a Mythos-class model that we’ve made safe for general use.
Its capabilities exceed those of any model we’ve ever made generally available.
If your not using /loops and /goals that's FINE.
Just stop using AI as ONLY a search engine.
That is the first big unlock.
Start with Claude Code. Start with Codex.
Prompt those coding agents. Deploy something to learn what these harnesses can actually do.
My biggest takeaway from the @firecrawl challenge was how agentic work feels different from prompting. You are not trying to write the perfect instruction once. You are designing a loop that can observe, decide, act, validate, and learn from what failed.
https://t.co/DsYgS6fvTI
.@conductor_build has become my daily driver for AI-driven software development.
Here are the keyboard shortcuts I’m using most to move faster:
Meta:
⌘ + / > View all keyboard shortcuts
⌘ + K > Jump to another project
⌘ + Shift + F > View workspace history
Workspaces:
⌘ + N > Start a new workspace
⌘ + L > Focus the chat pane
⌘ + T > Open a new tab or terminal
⌘ + W > Close the current pane, tab, or terminal
⌘ + [ or ⌘ + ] > Move left or right between tabs
⌘ + Shift + A > Archive the current workspace
⌘ + 1, ⌘ + 2, etc. > Switch between workspaces
⌘ + O > Open local directory options
⌘ + Shift + B > Open a localhost preview
Views:
⌘ + ⌥ + B > Open the right sidebar terminal
⌘ + B > Open or close the left sidebar
PRs:
⌘ + Shift + P > Create a PR
⌘ + Shift + M > Merge a PR
Queued Messages:
Return > Send a message
⌘ + Return > Queue a message
Arrow keys > Navigate queued messages
Delete > Remove a queued message
I built a stock research assistant that plans the research, waits for approval, fans out eight data tasks, streams the results, retries failures, and still produces a report.
https://t.co/vvoUywhGvz
This might be the best time to be working with AI.
Big companies are subsidising token usage to win market share, the same way Uber made rides feel unbelievably cheap when it launched against taxis.
Costs may keep falling.
Demand will keep rising.
It is a Darwinistic race.
Stop using AI like a search engine.
Here's my quick ladder from luddite to greek god:
L1. Chat (https://t.co/T0YdbhqRvz)
2. Claude Desktop
3. Codex
4. Cursor
5. CLI in Cursor
6. CLI in terminal
7. cmux
L8. Conductor
Hi. Over the last 24 hours we had three separate small incidents that affected Codex reliability. Those are three too many and we are taking active steps for them to not reproduce.
I have reset usage limits for Codex across all paid plans. May the tokens flow again.