"AI JUST MAKES SLOP VIDEOS INSTEAD OF CURING CANCER." WELL... ABOUT THAT.
Everyone loves to joke that we're using the most powerful technology on earth to generate weird AI videos instead of solving real diseases. Well, earlier than expected, here we are.
A acc tech bro in Australia with zero biology background just designed a custom mRNA cancer vaccine for his dying rescue dog, and the dog is now thriving with its tumor halved in size.
How he did it:
• Paid $3,000 to sequence the tumor's DNA.
• Fed the data into ChatGPT and AlphaFold to map mutated proteins and match drug targets.
• Navigated 3 months of red tape for ethics approval to get her injected.
He didn't just type a prompt into ChatGPT and pull a magic vial out of his computer. The heavy scientific lifting was done by AlphaFold ofc, and he still had to work closely with a university professor and an actual lab to physically synthesize the mRNA vaccine.
But don't underestimate ChatGPT's role.
It wasn't just a search engine here; it acted as a high level medical strategist. For a guy with no biology background, ChatGPT mapped out the exact pipeline he needed to follow, told him to get the genome sequenced, and even DIRECTED him to the specific university genomics center to get it done. It was literally the project manager that made the whole thing possible.
Indie game devs are about to love me (or hate me) for this...
I built an AI workflow (app included) that spits out spritesheets in minutes, from assets created on freepik.
Breaking it all down below 👇
this is insane.
just toggle this button and any coding agent can use your browser
> no more Chrome extensions
> One button, connect Claude Code to your browser
all you need is the right harness...
try it with the Browser Use CLI right now!
This AutoHarness paper (from Google DeepMind) is the most interesting thing I've read lately.
I am testing a similar idea (without training) on models like MiniMax-2.5 and getting good results.
It already allowed me to synthesize an entire functional coding agent. More soon.
Someone built an AI-driven particle simulator that lets you generate and visualize complex particle systems with prompts,
then export them as HTML, React, or Three.js simulations.
Underrated side-effect of AI: we are about to get a cambrian explosion of new games for retro consoles
Took me 5-6 prompts to make a working game with music in assembly on SNES
We’ll see “Steam for Super Nintendo” before the decade is out.