blog.bumper turns the structured end-of-task reports your coding agent already writes into published blog posts — no second context-switch, no copy-paste, no "I'll write it up later" that never happens.
(claude code assisted)
https://t.co/VDhwHIdYM5
Nobody will see this but this is how I do research 10x faster now
> I drop a topic into Claude Code
> It finds 10 relevant YouTube sources automatically
> Sends them to NotebookLM
6 minutes later I get a full structured analysis, an infographic, and a markdown file saved to my vault
Before this I was spending 3 hours doing the same thing manually and ending up with messy notes I'd never look at again
Now the system does it in one command and the output gets better every time I use it
full setup guide in the article
OXFORD STUDENT SHOWED HIS PHONE AND THE SECOND BRAIN INSIDE IT THAT MAKES HIM $18,000/MONTH
500+ interconnected nodes - every project, every client, every idea connected to each other and visible in one graph on his phone
Claude reads the entire map before every session so he never explains context from scratch - every conversation starts exactly where the last one ended
he manages multiple client projects simultaneously and the graph tells him exactly where everything stands without opening a single spreadsheet or document
commands from his phone, full context in Claude, decisions made in minutes instead of hours
most people are still keeping notes in Google Docs while he's running an $18,000/month business from a knowledge graph in his pocket
What I'm doing to mitigate this, is prefacing every pass with this:
BEFORE ANY DISCORD ACTION — read claude.md first: - Channel IDs are in claude.md (the channel list). Do NOT guess a channel ID or claim you don't have it — look it up in claude.md. #approve-this, #changelog..
Working with coding agents: they do NOT automatically check your project's CLAUDE.md, etc. unless explicitly asked. Mine posted to the wrong discord channel and claimed it didn't have the ID, the ID was in CLAUDE.md the whole time. The info being available isn't enough.
Andrej Karpathy spent 4 minutes in an interview explaining a single idea
about how most people haven’t even started learning how to use AI
and everyone paying $20/month for a subscription.. that's not really using Claude at all
his point is that the real skill gap is the ability to build with AI
he identified 4 behaviors that break Claude Code and put them all into one file
a developer expanded it into 21 rules and published it - 82,000 stars and #1 on GitHub Trending
coding accuracy jumped from 65% to 94%
here's what these 21 rules actually are and why most developers using Claude every day have never configured them
the full breakdown is covered in the article below 👇