Cycling yogi. Master of mayhem @aiboomworld IRL awareness, focus, attention, fitness, wellbeing, compassion.

Joined January 2016
307 Photos and videos
Alan Garcia πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡¦ retweeted
Apple just did something nobody expected. They turned 2 billion iPhones into local AI machines. They open-sourced coreai-models, the entire toolkit that lets you export any HuggingFace model and run it natively on iPhone, iPad and Mac with zero cloud. β†’ Runs 100% on the Neural Engine β†’ No cloud. No API keys. No subscriptions. β†’ Fully offline. Your data never leaves the device. It even ships with skills for Claude Code, Codex, and Gemini, so your coding agent already knows how to use it. 100% Open Source.
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Alan Garcia πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡¦ retweeted
SpaceX starts trading this Friday. Here's what history says happens next. This is the post-IPO performance of every major tech listing of the last decade. Every name you know. Every name you use. Look at the last column: maximum drawdown in year one. – Facebook: -54% – Snap: -56% – Uber: -68% – Pinterest: -70% – Lyft: -79% – Rivian: -88% – Robinhood: -90% Median first-year drawdown across the entire list: -54%. Average: -55%. Not the speculative junk. The whole class. Including the eventual winners. Zoom eventually rose 142% in year one. It still drew down 40% along the way. Palantir gained 153%. It still fell 53% at one point. CrowdStrike, Datadog, MongoDB. All ended year one higher. All put their holders through a 40 to 67% drawdown first. There has not been a single major tech IPO in a decade that didn't hand you a brutal drawdown in the first twelve months. Not one. Now SpaceX joins the list, at the richest valuation in IPO history. You don't have to buy it today. The IPO is the seller's moment, not the buyer's. Wait for the base.
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Alan Garcia πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡¦ retweeted
May 19
Starting today, use your Grok or X Premium subscription in @openclaw. Chat with your agent, generate images and videos, or search for X posts. x.ai/news/grok-openclaw
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Alan Garcia πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡¦ retweeted
The @xai team has published a full setup guide on how to use the xurl skill, which allows your Hermes Agent to read and write to X on your behalf β€” posting, searching, pulling bookmarks, managing lists, and more β€” all through natural language.
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x premium <> grok <> hermes integration on the menu this weekend. so I made my claw an offer: install, set up, and integrate the hermes agent across a VPS, CLI, and Slack and I'll reward us with the premium upgrade. bounty-driven agent dev LFG
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bounty update: Hermes is live. Cohosted beside OpenClaw on the VPS without disturbing it, isolated under its own service user, reachable over Tailscale, working in CLI, and now connected to Slack via Socket Mode. hell yes, Slack is alive πŸ¦€
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Can we not normalize this thanks
NEW: Former GitHub CEO Nat Friedman says his OpenClaw AI agent watches him through a home camera to make sure he drinks enough water.
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ui/ux qualm of day: posthog's most recent visual and info hierarchy revamp is neat to oh so unintuitive
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Linear should integrate a tool that - watches the computer use of humans or other agents and - logs as evidence the computer use recording - attempts to write relevant context towards an issue/feature request Consider posthog session recordings
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Alan Garcia πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡¦ retweeted
🦞 Shipped: openclaw-xai-search Search X posts from @openclaw using your SuperGrok sub. No X dev account needed. OAuth 2.0 x_search via xAI. Zero deps. Inspired by @NousResearch Hermes. github.com/clawdbrunner/open…
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Future of intelligence
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang's response to the question, "Who is the smartest person you've ever met in your life?": - The smartest person I've met might have gotten a terrible score even on the college entrance exam. - Everyone thought software programming was the ultimate intelligent profession. - What was the first thing artificial intelligence solved? Software programming. - The definition of intelligence is very different from what most people think. - True intelligence: Technical skill Human empathy The ability to understand what isn't said - People who can see beyond the corners are truly, truly smart. - Being able to prevent problems before they ariseβ€”just because you sense the air. - That air: Data Analysis First principles Life experience Wisdom Feeling other people - That's what intelligence is. - This will be the definition of intelligence in the future. And that person might have gotten a terrible score on the SAT
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slack should allow users to easily export chat transcripts for agents. just saying
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claude desktop as my on call engineer ftw
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very powerful but does not tolerate interruptions! no way to fork or add a quick btw
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also claude desktop doesn't seem to take the easy path when interacting with github. i would have expected it to ask for gh cli or github mcp to interact with repos and gists
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codex cli lets goal!
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i've been using gpt5.5. via openclaw for a couple weeks now so already familiar with the effectiveness of the model. now that i'm test driving codex and /goal, i'm finding nice affordances along the way with the cli
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a few neat codex cli affordances to note ``` /copy copy last response as markdown /raw toggle raw scrollback mode for copy-friendly terminal selection ``` Small things and I'm sure easily repeatable or already available in other harnesses. But thx!
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Alan Garcia πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡¦ retweeted
Replying to @IntCyberDigest
Running random AI tooling on your main machine is becoming the new β€œdownload free_crack.exe” x.com/NEARDevHub/status/2052…

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Alan Garcia πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡¦ retweeted
🚨 How the TanStack npm attack actually happened: 1. Attacker opened a normal-looking pull request (#7378) on the TanStack repo. 2. GitHub automatically ran CI tests on that PR. 3. Code inside the PR stole the workflow's GitHub Actions Cache write token during the test run. 4. The attacker used that token to plant poisoned files in the shared build cache. The PR could be closed afterwards. The poisoned cache stays. 5. The official release workflow later pulled from the cache, baked the malicious files into the build, and signed and published 84 malicious package versions to npm.
This attack leveraged GitHub Actions Cache Poisoning. Payload deployed here: github.com/TanStack/router/p… It looks like it detonated here: github.com/TanStack/router/a…
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