the two modes:
1. just me, a sacred connection to the imagination, a pen and my journal
2. a fully automated gundam harness commanding a legion of agents boiling a portion of the ocean to rebuild my personal site
training an agent is one of the best places i've found to play with emergent design. a sandbox with tight feedback loops plus an intelligence which riffs with my curiosity creates surprising and weird patterns
We’re running a 6 week incubator for folks in early projects. If you’re wanting a super talented and supportive crew to work alongside, we got you. DM if you have questions
For creative people who follow me who are trying to crack a project you've been working on or looking for some inspiration: Try this out, @davegorum & Kristen will help you figure it out. https://t.co/9Dj757mXow
If you're paying for dictation software... why?
https://t.co/TjWIotzS6S is free, includes excellent open source models, runs LOCALLY, works exactly the same as those apps charging a subscription and sending everything you say to the cloud.
Sat with a serial founder today. He’s been putting off building in music for years because it wasn’t viable.
Now it is.
His whole landscape shifted. Who he gets to work with. What a company can even look like. He’s building a music tooling company and hiring musicians backed by agents.
It looks a lot more like a studio than an office.
What does the future agent training rig look like? What’s the interface?
People act out their jobs and the rig captures it. Recording a skill for OpenClaw is not dissimilar to this.
It's been like almost a year since I talked with @davegorum on how design as a practice is evolving:
"The capabilities of a single individual are expanding dramatically, which is going to reshape what design even means. It’s no longer just visual design or UX design. The boundaries are blurring."
It's wild how things are turning from semi-theories to more grounded facts.