we have agi for code cause we captured, logged and documented every part of the process for the past 20 years (git). we need the same dataset to reach agi in other fields.
we should start capturing, logging and documenting every part of the workflows in any other field. yesterday.
lowest friction way to talk to my openclaw.
i configured the action button to a shortcut i built, the shortcut the starts recording me speaking immediately and sends it to my openclaw. i get an instant response on slack.
BREAKING: Traysar, America’s first subterranean defense startup, has secured a $25M seed round led by @SilentVentures.
The company is building autonomous “subterra” platforms designed to breach, map, secure, and create access points within contested underground networks.
Our interview with CEO @yadinsoffer breaks down @traysartech and the future of underground warfare.
2 weeks is a good benchmark. after 2 weeks of using a personal agent like hermes or openclaw, i like to be honest with myself.
i ask: is it still useful? did i overbuild it, and now it’s slow and forgetting?
jabba, my personal agent, which is just claude code in a desktop folder, passed the test.
i took the lean approach of doing everything claude code native: integrations, schedules, and .md files.
what made it survive is the observability: my ability to watch through the terminal what tools are being called, and the small folder on my desktop that i just peek at every once in a while.
building personal agents should be easier, and i think lean approaches will win.
assuming agi drops tomorrow and you’re trying to make it replace you and all of your work.
how long do you think it’ll take for it to understand the way you work and make decisions?
how much of it is actually logged and documented?