The floor is lava for indie devs.
AI is commoditizing code, platforms are absorbing apps, and tools like https://t.co/NwYOgXxCBP are cloning OSS without credit.
The fix? AI companies should build an agentic marketplace — vetted, paid code snippets & components that agents consume directly. Better agents. Real compensation. New moat.
Why @OpenAI , @AnthropicAI , @GoogleDeepMind , and @xai should do this →
https://t.co/Gtxvz4od3H
Last week we released LFM2.5-8B-A1B at @liquidai , a lightweight MoE built for local tool calling.
I wanted to put it to the test by building a Blender assistant powered by it.
A completely local agent that lives right inside your pocket. 📱
Watch Gemma 4 run 100% locally in the Google AI Edge Gallery app. It converts images into JSON schemas, transcribes audio, and uses agent skills to interact with apps, all entirely offline.
OpenJarvis: a local-first personal AI is now available to run with Ollama
Built by Stanford’s @HazyResearch and Scaling Intelligence labs, as part of their “Intelligence Per Watt” research into efficient local AI. @Stanford
Learn more in the blog post 👇👇👇
Today, we're releasing LFM2.5-8B-A1B, a device-optimized model designed to power real-life applications on phones, laptops, PCs, robots, and fast & lightweight server-side use-cases.
> 8B MoE, 1.5B active
> Expanded 128K context
> LFM2.5 flagship hybrid MoE architecture
> Trained on 38T tokens + large-scale RL
> fast, reliable tool calling, punching above its weight, comparable to models with up to 4x its size
> customizable on a single GPU for any specialized task
> LFM2 open-weight license
🧵
Gemma 4 meets retro gaming! 🕹️✨
Introducing AIventure: an open-source dungeon crawler designed as a developer masterclass. Learn to build agentic workflows and integrate vibe-coding, like prompting an NPC to build a web app on the fly.
I used @ChatGPTapp Image 2 to recreate the Dragoon spirits from Legend of Dragoon. I bet some of you can do better, especially you real artists who have way more talent than I do.
To prevent a future like the one in this picture, open source has to win.
(And it’s already happening, look at all those posts about people waiting for usage limit resets)
But most great developers chase money and work for corporations - which isn't a bad thing, you have to make a living.
They work for these companies, only to be the first ones mass-laid off under the excuse of cost-cutting.
The biggest problem with open source is always living expenses.
Only a tiny fraction of famous developers can actually survive through sponsorships or money from their own businesses.
But most of the amazing open-source developers I've talked to are worrying about rent, despite making incredible contributions.
I really want to solve this fundamental problem.