Wow, this tweet went very viral!
I wanted share a possibly slightly improved version of the tweet in an "idea file". The idea of the idea file is that in this era of LLM agents, there is less of a point/need of sharing the specific code/app, you just share the idea, then the other person's agent customizes & builds it for your specific needs.
So here's the idea in a gist format: https://t.co/NlAfEJjtJV
You can give this to your agent and it can build you your own LLM wiki and guide you on how to use it etc. It's intentionally kept a little bit abstract/vague because there are so many directions to take this in. And ofc, people can adjust the idea or contribute their own in the Discussion which is cool.
I currently run 412 OpenClaw agents 24/7 across 31 Mac Minis.
They’re:
• building apps
• automating my life
• generating business ideas
People ask how to replicate this system.
It’s actually very simple.
You just need about 30 Mac Minis, a solid imagination, and absolutely no fear of making things up on the internet.
Today, we're introducing Spectre I, the first smart device to stop unwanted audio recordings.
We live in a world of always-on listening devices.
Smart devices and AI dominate our world in business and private conversations.
With Deveillance, you will @be_inaudible.
Palmer Luckey: The biggest beneficiaries of vibecoding are going to be the shape rotators, not the wordcels.
"The biggest beneficiaries of vibecoding are going to be the hardware nerds like me."
"I was always a pretty terrible software engineer... I've taught myself enough to glue things together and make them work."
"I was only able to accomplish what I accomplished because I focused on what I was good at, which was optomechanics, a little bit of electrical, and then the product integration of all of these different components."
"I didn't have time to learn to program. If I had spent another year or two learning to program at even a reasonable level, I would've been two years behind on everything else."
"And so I'm a big fan of vibecoding—even if everything that comes out of it is slop, it's better than I was able to make."
@PalmerLuckey on @tpbn
@AIEMiami Are you looking for any volunteers for aie Miami? I went to aie code summit nyc late last year and the hackathon after and had a great time and would love to volunteer if any help is needed. Planning to goto San Fran aie world fair also
Gave Clawdbot access to my portfolio.
"Trade this to $1M. Don't make mistakes"
25 strategies. 3,000+ reports. 12 new algos.
It scanned every X post. Charted every technical. Traded 24/7.
It lost everything.
But boy was it beautiful.
Today my boss asked me if we're "ready for AI this year".
I said absolutely. I told him we've been running "machine learning models" on our data infrastructure for the past 18 months and we're seeing "significant optimization gains."
He asked for specifics. I said, "Our email filtering system uses neural networks to detect phishing attempts with 97% accuracy."
He looked impressed.
Here's the truth: that's just the default spam filter in Office 365. Microsoft built it. We didn't do anything.
But I rebranded it as "AI-powered threat detection" in a slide deck last year, and now everyone thinks we're innovators.
My boss wants to announce our "AI initiatives" in the next shareholder meeting. I told him I'd prepare a presentation.
I'm going to take every automated process we already have—backup scripts, user provisioning, patch management—and add the words "AI-enhanced" in front of them.
Innovation isn't about building new things.
It's about renaming old things with better buzzwords.