I recorded a short guide for people asking how to build a DIY Autopilot rule in Predict Jensen.
The part that may confuse first-time users is Trading Enable.
When you reach the final activation step, the bot may ask you to complete Trading Enable before the Autopilot can start.
That is expected.
Polymarket requires a trading enable/signature step before a wallet can trade, and Predict Jensen has to respect that flow.
We also ask for at least a $5 deposit before Autopilot setup.
The reason is practical: Polymarket has minimum trade constraints, including 5 shares+ and $1+ minimums. A $5 starting balance gives enough room for a small test rule instead of failing at the first trade.
So the beginner flow is:
fund at least $5,
create the DIY rule,
choose the entry size and risk limit,
complete Trading Enable if prompted,
start Autopilot.
The video walks through this slowly.
My suggestion: do the first setup small.
The goal is not to rush into size.
The goal is to understand how the rule, risk limit, Trading Enable, and Autopilot activation fit together.
Once that is clear, the workflow becomes much easier to repeat.
This is the kind of workflow I built DIY Autopilot for.
The rule itself is not complicated:
BTC 5m market, either side, enter only when the target is at 0.95 or higher, only in the final 30 seconds, only one entry per round, 5 shares per entry, and a $5 max drawdown for the session.
Simple to understand.
Very hard to run by hand.
To do this manually, a user would have to check every 5-minute round, wait for the final 30 seconds, confirm the target is high enough, enter quickly, wait for resolution, claim, and then repeat the same routine again.
Doing that for hours is not realistic.
So the real question is not whether the rule is simple.
The question is whether a normal user can turn that rule into a bot-like workflow without building a bot from scratch.
With Predict Jensen DIY Autopilot, that is the point.
In this run, the setup stayed active for about 4 hours.
It entered 15 times.
It resolved 15W / 0L.
Total PnL was +$2.89.
Each entry used only 5 shares, roughly $4–$4.5 per entry.
The absolute dollar amount is small, and I think that is actually the right way to test this.
Start small. Watch the behavior. Let the bot handle the repetition. Let Auto Claim recycle the flow. Then decide whether the rule deserves more size.
The same structure can be scaled, but I personally prefer testing it with small amounts first.
I am a developer, so of course I care about the system design. But I also enjoy using it myself.
There is something genuinely fun about setting a rule I understand, letting the bot do the boring part, and seeing a few dollars come in from a workflow that would have been too annoying to run manually.
DIY Autopilot is not about one giant trade.
It is about turning a repeated rule into something a normal user can actually run.
@MrFiberNet@aisearchio English isn't my first language, so whenever I use a translator, it just comes out sounding like gibberish. That aside, I think this is an incredible feature that belongs on every smartphone. I’m going to check if there’s a way to do this in ComfyUI.
@organic_noob@antigravity What I meant by 'handoff' is the seamless continuation of the session chat history. Other than updating to the latest version of Antigravity, no further manual updates should be necessary.