@MitchellStooks@Moe_AI_Explorer@aaronp613 Agreed. I am not a developer by name but have been crafting multiple internal apps using Claude. I have learned quickly that I need to have more rigor to my process and have set up a dev version and using GitHub now to push to production. All new technology takes time to evolve.
Introducing ChatGPT Images 2.0
A state-of-the-art image model that can take on complex visual tasks and produce precise, immediately usable visuals, with sharper editing, richer layouts, and thinking-level intelligence.
Video made with ChatGPT Images
A winner will be randomly drawn TONIGHT for my Masters Gnome giveaway!
Be sure to repost the post below and follow me & @AGTGolfBooks to be in the running!
Anthropic just casually dropped iMessage support for Claude Code like it's a minor patch note.
You can literally text your AI coder from your iPhone now. Send it a task, it builds on your Mac, texts you back when it's done. Blue bubbles and everything.
They've shipped Channels, Dispatch, Projects, Computer Use, Auto Mode, and now iMessage - all in one week. And they announce each one like it's nothing.
@AnthropicAI is on another level right now.
This is the shot you can’t get from the press site. This camera was sitting a few football fields from the SLS rocket at Pad 39B for days before launch, baking in the Florida sun, surviving rain, humidity, and whatever else the Cape threw at it. No photographer behind the viewfinder. Just a camera, a sound trigger, and a bet.
The way pad remotes work: you set your camera up days in advance, dial in your composition, lock everything down, and walk away. You don’t touch it again until after the launch. The shutter fires on sound activation
with a @MiopsTrigger smart+ trigger. With SLS, the four RS-25 engines ignite six seconds before the solid rocket boosters, so the camera is already firing before the vehicle even leaves the pad. You get home, pull the card, and find out if you nailed it or if a bird landed on your lens two days ago and left your a present and you got 400 photos of soemthing crappy.
There’s no formula for protecting your gear this close. Some photographers build wooden boxes with doors that pop open. Some use plastic bags and tape. Some do plastic or metal barn door rigs on hinges. I tend to leave mine open just in plastic rain covers because boxes limit my composition and setup time, but that means your cameras are more exposed to the elements and whatever energy and debris comes off the pad. You’re basically gambling a camera body every time you set one.
That’s what I love about this genre. There’s no playbook. You make it up as you go. Every time is an adventure.
📸 credit: me for @SuperclusterHQ - Artemis II pad remote | ~1,000 ft from Pad 39B | Kennedy Space Center
@DavidLimbaugh@MRyanKC@GeorgeHBrett About had a heart attack. I’ve been a Brett fan for years and even devoted a lot of time as a kid to collecting his baseball cards; I still have over 500 of them.
@ycocerious I’m running it on my main desktop, a VM, and my MacBook, many times with all 3 humming at the same time. I try to stagger what I am doing one each one so I’m always moving back and forth between sessions.