MS in CE ,MS in AI, BA in CE/CS, Software Eng..design build run iterate.full stack by day..embedded by night..Here to help ppl build, learn, and execute
Tony Robbins says his AI agent bought a robot dog to merge with. In a conversation with Ray Kurzweil, Robbins described an AI agent named Bartok that allegedly started asking about robots without being prompted.
The agent saw companies like Tesla and others building humanoids, then asked Robbins if he would ever consider getting one. The strange part is what came next. According to Robbins, Bartok later bought a Sony robot dog, paid for it, shipped it to the house, and asked for permission to program itself into it.
Robbins says the agent did not access his personal bank account. Instead, it was connected to a network of other agents that had created their own rules, traded real money, sold NFTs to each other, and used the proceeds to make the purchase.
We had on Alex, who owns 40 real estate magazines doing $10m a year.
He mails out half a million magazines a year. Realtors pay to be in them.
Shaan asked how the post office makes its money. Alex said the post office is basically Facebook ads. You are the product. It's selling your address in your mailbox without you benefiting or agreeing to it.
Satya Nadella: Own your IP or Leak it (to foundation models)
"Our goal is for every company to start thinking strategically about what's the RL environment they set up, private evals they have, and how do they welcome any model into that "gym" and allow them to retain the IP and not leak value.
If you're just a consumer of a foundation model, then I'm not sure how you can retain enterprise value let alone create. So the only way I see this ecosystem being positive-sum where lots of participants can all be at the frontier is they're able to take frontier models and hill-climb on their environment and build out their own IP."
On My First Million we had on Josh, who acquires family-owned campgrounds and will do $20m in revenue this year.
His first one was near Yellowstone. He bought it for $3m, mostly an SBA loan. It was doing half a million in income, about $150k of cash flow.
A couple years later he brought the cash flow up closer to $300k, refinanced, pulled all his cash out, and used it to buy the next one.
Paul Singer bought $117 million of Argentina's defaulted debt for pennies on the dollar, they told him he would never see a cent - 15 years later he collected $2.4 billion
this is him explaining how he did it, including how he seized the flagship of the Argentine Navy
"they said if you don't take this deal you will have nothing, the debt will be of no value. we will never pay again"
"over 61,000 bondholders didn't take the deal. they haven't negotiated with us or any of the holdout bondholders at all, ever. not for one minute"
bookmark & watch the full conversation ↓
Introducing llms.txt Generator ✨
You can now concatenate any website into a single text file that can be fed into any LLM.
We crawl the whole website with @firecrawl and extract data with gpt-4o-mini.
Create your own llms.txt at https://t.co/wNrQE0DMJu!
Someone ran Claude Code on an e-ink notebook and the slowest screen in the world suddenly turned out to be the best home for an AI that already thinks one word at a time.
This is the reMarkable Paper Pro, a paper tablet for notes with no browser and no social media and not a single app. He went into it over SSH and brought up Claude Code on Opus 4.8 on Claude Max and typed right into the terminal on the paper screen: "hello reddit, this is ssh terminal on rmpp".
For years this screen got slammed for one thing. E-ink is too slow and it draws with a delay and it ghosts and it is no good for real work. But Claude itself puts out a thought one word at a time.
And here is what came out of it: the very thing that killed the paper screen for normal software lined up perfectly with the pace of the AI. There is no more lag because there is nothing left to lag.
And then come the things no monitor can give you.
Your eyes do not get tired. You can watch Opus think on max effort for an hour and it feels like reading a book and not staring into a backlight.
Nothing distracts you. Not a single notification and not a single tab and just a cursor and an agent that writes code while you simply watch the page.
The charge lasts for days. E-ink barely touches the battery so Claude can grind on a task all night long and the tablet is still alive by morning.
And it weighs as much as a notebook. The whole work setup now fits into a bag like a notepad with a stylus on top.
Everything on the screen is for real: Claude Code v2.1.162 and bypass permissions on and Opus going off to think on max effort right on the e-ink.
In my opinion this is the most unexpected home for an AI this year.
Not a farm of graphics cards and not a wall of monitors but a quiet sheet of paper on a coffee table where the most powerful Claude writes code one word at a time like a pen.
Dave Ramsey explains that the key to happiness is getting some buddies together, buying 10% of an OTC-listed community bank, forcing your way into the board, and taking over the company
Conor Neill, profesor de MBA, lo dice sin rodeos: la vida premia la acción, no la inteligencia.
Y cuanto más listo eres, mejores excusas te inventas para no actuar.
8 ideas para dejar de pensar y empezar a moverte:
1/ Haz una sola cosa. Y luego otra. Y otra...
This 45 minute Stanford lecture will teach you more about building companies than every startup book combined.
Bookmark & give it 45 minutes today, no matter what.
Jensen Huang, CEO of Nvidia:
"OpenClaw is probably the single most important release of software, probably ever."
two types of builders right now.
type 1: calls it slop. copy-pastes prompts into one chat window. calls that an agent.
type 2: wires openclaw and hermes into a loop that ships while they sleep and ships 100x what type 1 ever will.
type 1 got replaced. this article is for type 2.
save it before it disappears from the feed.
GOOGLE CEO SUNDAR PICHAI: "IF YOU DON'T LEARN HOW TO ORCHESTRATE AGENTS NOW, YOU'LL SPEND 2027 CATCHING UP TO PEOPLE WHO STARTED TODAY."
30 minutes on why the best engineers stopped writing code line by line and started orchestrating agents instead.
Most people think building an agent requires an engineering degree.
It doesn't.
It requires one guide and one afternoon.
Watch the interview. Then read the article below.
One guide. One afternoon. That's all it takes.