I genuinely don't understand why everyone isn't using this yet
Andrej Karpathy, a co-founder of OpenAI, posted a simple idea that hit 16 million views: stop using AI to write code, use it to build a second brain.
You point Claude Code at a folder, drop in any source, an article, a transcript, a PDF, and Claude reads it, links it, and files it into a living wiki of everything you know. It compounds like interest, the more you feed it, the smarter it gets.
Here's the whole thing:
> Install Obsidian, create a vault, open it in Claude Code
> Paste Karpathy's wiki idea file and tell Claude to build it
> Claude makes three folders: raw for sources, wiki for its pages, a CLAUDE.md that runs it
> Drop any source into raw and say "ingest this"
> Ask questions across everything, forever
Five minutes to set up, and you never start from a blank chat again.
Full step-by-step guide with Claude and Obsidian, link below.
Bookmark this
A TEAM OF AI RESEARCHERS JUST OPEN-SOURCED THE BLOOMBERG TERMINAL FOR QUANT FINANCE.
A Bloomberg Terminal costs $25,000 per year per seat. Banks pay for thousands of them.
This thing reads every quant paper, every financial blog, every SEC filing, every arXiv preprint, and turns it into a searchable knowledge base. For free.
It's called QuantMind.
It just got accepted to the NeurIPS 2025 GenAI in Finance Workshop.
Here's what it actually does:
→ Ingests arXiv quant papers, financial news, blogs, and reports automatically
→ Parses PDFs, HTML, tables, and figures into structured knowledge
→ Tags every paper by research area and topic
→ Builds a semantic knowledge graph you can query in plain English
→ Plugs into DeepResearch, RAG, and MCP for multi-hop reasoning
→ Two-stage architecture: extract once, retrieve forever
Here's the wildest part:
The financial research industry publishes around 500 new papers and reports every single day.
Hedge funds pay six-figure salaries to junior analysts whose entire job is reading them.
QuantMind reads all of it. Tags it. Embeds it. Lets you ask it questions.
154 stars. 22 forks. 173 commits. MIT license. Python.
One honest note: this is a framework, not a magic alpha machine. You still need to know what to ask. But the "I haven't read that paper yet" excuse is officially dead.
The thing Wall Street charges $25,000 a year for is sitting on GitHub. Free.
Link in the comments.
SpaceX is actively hiring world-class engineers/physicists for SpaceXAI, even if you have zero prior experience in AI. Smart humans figure it out fast.
Please send an email with ~3 bullet points demonstrating evidence of exceptional ability to [email protected].
I AM QUITTING MY JOB TO GO FULL IN CLAUDE
Just asked him to:
"Analyze misspriced Polymarket markets opportunities for arbitrage and find wallets that are using it to copy"
Turned $2K into $12K in one night
Monitored ~1k+ wallets
I just realized that there are many arbitrage bots that I can't beat without code knowledge
But I can find them and copy
So Claude created a monitoring terminal and copytraded found wallets using TG copytrading bot
It's not a script and not even the bot, it's an AI agent that is improving with each found wallet
Fetching wallet behaviour, how it's trading, arbitrage, what's sized and timings
70% win rate, 7 wallets copytrading rn from ~500 monitored, bot never paused, never gambling, just math and profit
You only need Claude + Device + 1 hour/day.
Giving This Free for 24 hours. To get it:
1. Comment What Ever you think about it. ( Mandatory )
2. Like and Retweet this post
3. Follow me @marryevan999 (so i can DM you)
I made $19,000+ in 18 days copy-trading a Chinese quant who turned $200 into $354,000 in 48 hours.
Same MiroFish + Claude setup he's used to clear $350K all-time.
7,500% on a single position.
I've prepared the exact step-by-step guide to build this BTC simulation engine. Giving this free for 24 hours.
To get it:
1. Comment "Claude" + Like and RT
2. Follow me @codewithimanshu (So, i can DM you)
You only need Claude + a device + 1 hour/day.
Used The system below:
- Claude = the algorithm's brain
- MiroFish = the simulation engine
- 10,000 cycles run before every single trade
- Closed order book + private OTC desk feeds
His wallet hit $350K all-time. Mine hit $19.6K in 18 days copying him.
His Polymarket ID: gobblewobble
He's not predicting the future.
He's running 10,000 versions of every market reaction before the market moves.
You Must Follow me @codewithimanshu, so i can send you DM.
You're staring at charts hoping for a setup.
He's running Monte Carlo simulations while you sleep.
Hermes Agent now has multi-agent via the Kanban, new in v0.12.0.
Agents claim tasks from a board, work in parallel, and hand off when blocked. You watch progress and unblock from one easy view instead of juggling terminals.
We asked it to plan and make this video about itself:
Jim Simons agreed to do exactly one long-form interview about his life in math, codebreaking for the NSA, and building Renaissance Technologies. The Simons Foundation filmed it and dumped it on their website behind a Vimeo player nobody could find.
Two hours and 40 minutes. Someone reuploaded it to YouTube on a channel with 483 subscribers. 749 people have watched it.
The deepest Simons interview on the internet. And almost no one knows it exists.
Bookmark it tonight. Then read the article below.
Top quants at Jane Street build careers on probability, stochastic processes, and Markov chains.
This 1-hour lecture from Massachusetts Institute of Technology teaches the mathematical foundation behind that world.
The same concepts used in quantitative trading, pricing models, and decision systems.
Save this and make time to watch it today.
Jane Street pays $750k/ year for quants who can answer how to use Stochastic Process and Markov Chains in quant trading.
This 1-hour MIT lecture on probability gives you the same insights quants get paid $60K/month for.
Bookmark & watch today. Then read the article below.
A Google DeepMind researcher cornered me at a bar in Hayes Valley
I was showing my Polymarket PNL to a friend. She leaned over. Didn't introduce herself.
"That's not a trading app. Show me your stack"
I told her. Claude Code. Four repos. $25 a month.
She set down her drink.
"We tested this internally. You connect Claude directly to a dataset. It builds its own detectors. But nobody ships it because compliance kills everything"
I asked what she meant.
She took my phone. Opened one link.
https://t.co/klxt0tvrOd
86 million trades. Every wallet. Every entry. Every exit.
"You don't tell Claude what to look for. It finds the wallets that win. Then it finds WHY they win. Then it copies the pattern"
Her team spent 9 months building this for a hedge fund. 14 people. $2M budget.
"The part that took us the longest - exit logic. Everyone thinks entries matter. They don't. Exits are the entire game"
I told her my bot cuts at 85% of expected move or on a 3x volume spike.
She went quiet.
"Who taught you that"
Claude Code found it in poly_data. Top wallets exit before resolution 91% of the time. They capture the move and leave.
She opened another link.
https://t.co/SbyxXxFk0M
"This is the scanner. Three commands. 500+ markets. No API key. Claude scores them in 20 minutes"
"That's our exact infra. Except it took us 9 months and you did it in a weekend"
My setup:
Claude API - $20/mo
VPS - $5/mo
poly_data - free
polymarket-cli - free
19 days. 4 agents. 74% win rate.
Copytrade here: https://t.co/N2byLbMfwH
I showed her the article where I broke down every repo, every command, every dollar.
She read it for five minutes. Then:
"You just open-sourced our entire pipeline"
She texted me the next day.
"My team lead saw your thread. Take it down"
Too late.
Instead of watching an hour of Netflix, watch this 1 hour Yale lecture. It will teach you more about options trading and the exact models hedge funds use than most people learn in their entire careers on Wall Street.
Boris Cherny created Claude Code. he thinks IDEs are dead by end of year.
This is a 28-minute masterclass on how Anthropic uses it internally.
I wrote 5 pipelines you can sell with it. none of them are coding.
This is the most complete Claude Code setup that exists right now.
27 agents. 64 skills. 33 commands. All open source.
The Anthropic hackathon winner open-sourced his entire system, refined over 10 months of building real products.
What's inside:
→ 27 agents (plan, review, fix builds, security audits)
→ 64 skills (TDD, token optimization, memory persistence)
→ 33 commands (/plan, /tdd, /security-scan, /refactor-clean)
→ AgentShield: 1,282 security tests, 98% coverage
60% documented cost reduction.
Works on Claude Code, Cursor, OpenCode, Codex CLI. 100% open source.
The Qwen 3.5 small model series is now available
ollama run qwen3.5:9b
ollama run qwen3.5:4b
ollama run qwen3.5:2b
ollama run qwen3.5:0.8b
All models support native tool calling, thinking, and multimodal capabilities in Ollama.
Claude Cowork is a sleeping giant. It's going to be bigger than Claude Code
Been using it nonstop the last few days. NOBODY is talking about it's capabilities
You need to do this exercise right now:
Write down EVERYTHING you do today. From the moment you wake up to the moment you go to sleep
Put it all down
Then go to Cowork and say here's everything I do, what can you help me out with?
The issue is you don't know what Cowork is capable of. Let Cowork fill in this unknowns
Cowork will return back every task it could do for you. All the research is can do, all the tasks, all the document creation.
I did this last week and I'm blown away. Cowork is now saving me hours a day
Do it.