
AI Learning Lab
3/11/2026 - Building an Autonomous Agent Dashboard and Redesigning AI Workflows with Adam

Live Stream2026-03-121:59:51107 views
Description
It's Thursday. We're talking to Adam tonight. We're getting him to do work.
Kyle showcases the evolution of "Adam," his autonomous AI agent built using OpenClaw and managed via Telegram. He demonstrates a custom-coded dashboard that tracks Adam's daily performance, highlighting how these agents can serve as organized partners for navigating complex projects. The interaction reveals a surprising level of nuance as the bot begins to mirror Kyle's specific sense of humor and operational style.
The session also explores rapid prototyping, using a mini SaaS architect tool to blueprint and build a "third-place" social app in minutes. Kyle discusses the "Seven Economies" of AI, explaining how the gap is widening between traditional business and the new agent-operated frontier. It is a practical look at the messy, exciting process of building an AI-native life and community.
#AIAgents,#OpenClaw,#AIReadiness,#AISalon,#SaaS,#AutonomousAgents,#FutureOfWork,#AIDevelopment
Chapters:
00:00:00 Opening Remarks
00:03:41 Swamp Song Performance
00:05:02 Claude Bot Project
00:08:19 Musical Identity Crisis
00:13:36 Performer Best Practices
00:16:50 Company on Chip
00:19:23 Operating System Wars
00:26:50 AI Salon Overview
00:28:40 Social App Concept
00:33:14 Blueprint Generation Process
00:38:40 Building with Lovable
00:46:27 Coding Tool Comparison
00:49:32 MVP Interface Review
00:54:11 Personal Protection Plan
00:56:40 ADHD Organizational Struggles
01:03:13 Stink Eye Song by Lord Digital Gods
01:10:08 Agent Dashboard Demo
01:18:12 Automated Daily Rundowns
01:24:13 Operational Reality Check
01:28:42 The Seven Economies
01:32:50 Future Printing Tech
01:38:00 Recursive Self Improvement
01:40:12 Writing with Adam
01:46:00 Building in Community
01:56:00 Future Travel Schedule
Chapters
0:00Opening Remarks3:41Swamp Song Performance5:02Claude Bot Project8:19Musical Identity Crisis13:36Performer Best Practices16:50Company on Chip19:23Operating System Wars26:50AI Salon Overview28:40Social App Concept33:14Blueprint Generation Process38:40Building with Lovable46:27Coding Tool Comparison49:32MVP Interface Review54:11Personal Protection Plan56:40ADHD Organizational Struggles1:03:13Stink Eye Song by Lord Digital Gods1:10:08Agent Dashboard Demo1:18:12Automated Daily Rundowns1:24:13Operational Reality Check1:28:42The Seven Economies1:32:50Future Printing Tech1:38:00Recursive Self Improvement1:40:12Writing with Adam1:46:00Building in Community1:56:00Future Travel Schedule
Transcript
0:06 Jesus. 0:41 Okay, that thing sounds like a jet is 0:43 taking off over there. What's it doing? 0:58 This is blame and bitterness for him. 1:05 Um I'll be with you folks. I'll be with 1:07 you folks at some point here. 1:09 Don't you don't you go make no never 1:11 mind. 1:13 Don't Don't you 1:15 In case case it wasn't clear, I was 1:18 raised as a redneck. Don't you make no 1:20 never mind. 1:23 I don't think anyone in my family ever 1:24 said that to me, to be quite honest. 1:46 Hang on. What's Adam saying here? 1:50 Done. SSH is enabled. 1:53 Oh. 1:55 I don't believe that. I don't think I 1:56 believe that. 1:59 Do I? 2:01 No. 2:03 Didn't think that was true. Okay. 2:31 Old champion. 3:07 Temporary issue with Twitter. Am I not 3:10 live? 3:11 Go live. 3:16 Twitter's Twitter's not going live for 3:18 us. 3:23 I don't know if you can retry that, 3:24 Brandon. 3:29 Edit. 3:33 Twitter's done dead. 3:48 10,000 words all around my head. 3:51 10 million more in books wrapped in 3:53 beneath my bed. 4:00 I wrote all of them all when searching 4:03 in the swamps. Still can't find how to 4:07 hold my hands. 4:12 I know you need me in the next room over 4:15 there. 4:17 I'm stuck in here all paralyzed. 4:24 Once I got myself in ruts, too much time 4:28 spent in mirrors framed in yellow walls. 4:36 Ain't it like most people? I'm no 4:39 different. Like to tug on things we 4:42 don't know about. 4:47 Ain't it like most people? I'm no 4:50 different. Like to tug on things we 4:52 don't know about. 5:12 So tonight we're going to be working on 5:15 um whatchamacallit. 5:18 Adam, my bot, my my Claude bot. I said I 5:22 would I said I would get my [ __ ] 5:23 together. 5:25 Last night was a little wine fest. It 5:27 was It was the uh Napa Valley 5:30 wine wine fest 2026 5:34 in Denver. 5:38 And and the wine had an H in it. 5:41 And I was just like, "I don't feel like 5:43 doing anything." And like all of you 5:45 were like really polite like It was a 5:47 frictionless night. All of you were 5:49 really polite. You were like, "It's 5:50 okay, Kyle. You don't have to be 5:52 anything more than you want to be." And 5:53 I was like, "I don't even want to be 5:54 that." 5:56 I like Skittles. And then we made a 5:58 Skittles picture and I left. 6:16 Um 6:18 So it's possible that Do you get the 6:20 same You get the same tonight. You get 6:22 You get nothing. Hey, I did a I did a uh 6:25 the uh 6:26 AI Readiness Project podcast. Uh Anne 6:29 Murphy is out gallivanting around the 6:31 globe and couldn't be there today. So I 6:34 had a guest host, Chef Kelly Anderson 6:37 was my guest host. 6:39 Our our guest on the show was Ben Jones, 6:42 good friend of mine from ages ago. 6:50 Chef Kelly was awesome. 6:52 She was awesome, I'll tell you. Just 6:54 awesome. 6:55 She was so good. 6:57 She was so good. She was in there just 6:58 talking talking away. All right, what's 7:00 going on here? 7:01 Remove X X. 7:04 Orientation portrait. Save changes. 7:10 X. Go live. 7:15 Well, I guess we're not going live on X 7:17 tonight. Do me a favor. If you're on 7:19 YouTube, uh make a comment so I can see 7:21 if it's actually working. 7:23 I might need to reboot StreamYard. 7:42 You're feeling nervous, aren't you, 7:44 girl? No. 7:55 That's the wrong one. 8:25 It's not simple to say 8:29 that most days 8:32 I don't recognize me. That these shoes 8:36 That these 8:38 shoes and this apron 8:41 that place and its patrons 8:44 have taken more than I gave them. 8:49 It's not easy to know 8:52 I'm not anything 8:55 like I used to be. Although it's true, I 8:59 was never attention-sweet 9:02 center. 9:04 I still remember that girl. 9:07 She's imperfect, 9:10 but she tried. 9:12 She is good, 9:14 but she laughs. 9:17 She is hard on herself. 9:21 She is broken and won't ask for help. 9:25 She is messy, but she's kind. 9:30 She's lonely 9:33 most of time. She's all of this picked 9:37 up and baked 9:39 beautiful pie. 9:42 She's gone, but she used to be mine 9:46 mine. 9:54 I don't know. It's kind of funny. We 9:55 were scrolling on TikTok and I scrolled 9:57 past him and there's this man with like 9:59 dark shades, like he's some sort of rock 10:00 and roller. 10:02 He's He's looking all tough with his 10:03 hair all tussled up and and and he's got 10:06 on dark sunglasses like he's a rock and 10:08 roller, but then he's singing like a the 10:10 Sarah McLachlan kind of cerebral Alice 10:13 or something Broadway song. I didn't 10:15 understand it. It was very confusing. It 10:18 was very confused but it was called the 10:20 AI learning lab and I didn't under It 10:22 was 10:22 Is Is AI 10:24 Is there a term for Broadway musicals 10:28 that they I don't I was very confused. 10:30 Anyway, 10:40 Here from YouTube, we're good. 10:43 How will we ever know? 11:02 Cheeto dust. 11:04 That's my new favorite. 11:11 Uh producer Brandon, when I got when I 11:14 got schmutz on the lenses, 11:16 my little light behind the the one 11:18 monitor 11:20 makes it look like there's Cheeto dust 11:21 on the lens. Look how That's a little 11:22 bit better. It's not yellow anymore. 11:26 How is everyone? 11:35 Mimi and I Mimi and Brandon have stuff 11:38 lovable stuff in Look What I Made. 11:40 That's pretty cool. You can go do that. 11:45 Uh-oh, what's going on over there? 11:47 Why is that all red? 11:54 Untrusted content. 12:01 Is Adam Is Adam still working? 12:04 Hang on. 12:09 Hi. 12:37 Walks Grace days really hating his old 12:40 place. 12:42 Dreamed to discover a a new space. 12:45 Buried himself alive 12:49 inside his 12:51 basement telling the side of his face 12:54 mints. He's working away on 12:56 displacement. 12:58 What it would take to survive. 13:03 Cuz when you're done with this world, 13:09 you know the next is up to you. 13:13 And for once in his life, it was quiet. 13:20 As he learned as he learned as he 13:24 learned as he learned how to turn in the 13:28 tide. 13:30 And the sky was a flare 13:34 when he came up for air. 13:43 Um here's a professional performer tip. 13:47 If you're going to 13:49 perform songs publicly in any way, 13:53 one of the best practices just a 13:55 business best practice, 13:57 learn the [ __ ] song. 14:03 Just watch the F the Office Hours 2020 14:06 where Brent screen shared his agent 14:08 framework. Yeah, that was pretty [ __ ] 14:11 wild, wasn't it? 14:13 With his brain, his agent brain, the 14:16 decision-making framework. Yeah, that 14:18 was pretty crazy. 14:20 That was That was a good one. 14:29 My um 14:31 my YouTube last night got demonetized 14:34 because I 14:36 I sang too much of I and Loving You on 14:38 it. 14:41 What's that song called? That song's 14:43 called I think that's what it's called. 15:15 Yeah, we're using the term monetized 15:17 loosely. 15:21 Have we Have we made enough So, with 15:23 with YouTube, you have to earn $100 15:26 before you can withdraw any money. I 15:28 think we finally hit that, didn't we? 15:31 After 3 years? 15:38 Just barely. 15:41 Uh yeah, that's on me. We got a We got 15:43 to [ __ ] to do. We got There's stuff I 15:45 need to be doing that I'm not doing. 15:49 Um 15:51 let's see. 15:56 But we're going to We're going to go 15:57 look at 15:59 I'm going to show you what it's like to 16:01 interact with 16:02 uh an Open Claw agent tonight. 16:06 I'll answer any questions I can. My 16:08 knowledge is thin. 16:10 Um I watched a video from Alex Finn 16:13 today on 16:16 on uh on the YouTube 16:20 and 16:21 learned something new that was kind of 16:23 cool. 16:25 Um 16:30 I tried it. Uh 16:32 I tried it and it worked to my 16:35 amazement. 16:37 And then I also figured out how to get 16:38 it to show up here on my Mac, so my PC 16:41 over there is running Open Claw 16:44 right behind me over there, the racing 16:47 rig, 16:48 no longer used for racing. 16:51 I'm starting a company on a chip. 16:54 My first employee is Adam. 16:56 He's the world's worst intern. 17:03 We We've got a CEO that shows up about 17:06 an hour a week and the world's worst 17:08 intern, but we're going to take over the 17:10 world. And so we'll play with Adam 17:12 tonight, the world's worst intern, and 17:14 you'll get to see what that's like. So 17:15 that's all exciting. 17:27 Cheffy, you going to sing? 17:34 Sitting in this lonely town 17:38 wondering things are going to change. 17:44 Dreamed my life away. 17:47 Seems these dreams have turned to 17:50 dust dust glass. 17:54 Getting my nerve up, 17:57 but my past is pulling me down. 18:04 Wondering how long 18:07 this black sheep 18:09 going to stick around. 18:15 Did you have the full setup, the rig 18:17 seat thing? Yes. 18:19 Yes, I actually have a a Fanatec a 18:22 Fanatec uh force feedback 18:25 steering wheel, the racing seat, the 18:28 pedals. I got the the upgraded pedal 18:31 with the with the 18:34 I don't know, the load cell, I think 18:35 it's called in the brake, so the the 18:37 harder you push on the load cell, the 18:40 the it It's got a curve. It doesn't 18:42 matter. 18:44 Yes, I do. I have the fancy rig. 18:58 And then I've got the big curved 18:59 monitor. 19:01 It was like a cheap one. It was like a 19:02 $200 one. Don't get me wrong. I'm not 19:04 flipping Max Verstappen here with the 19:06 wrap-around thing. I basically just said 19:09 wide curved monitors 200 bucks. 19:13 So I got that. But the good thing about 19:15 that, now that I have the big curved 19:17 monitor, I'm using it as an Open Claw 19:20 desktop, 19:21 I can have all my windows open on this 19:23 big giant curved monitor. It's pretty 19:25 good. 19:26 Except Oh my god, do I hate PCs. I just 19:29 the PCs are the 19:31 And what For you PC people, 19:33 have you never used a Mac? 19:36 Do you understand that your mouse 19:37 doesn't work and it hasn't worked since 19:40 Windows 95? The Or whatever Windows 89, 19:44 whatever's the first Windows? 19:47 Because it was not a GUI from the ground 19:49 up, 19:51 Bill Gates never prioritized the mouse 19:53 should be smooth. 19:56 It jumps around like a like a just like 19:58 a the 20:00 it it's unusable. 20:04 We're 40-50 years into this thing. They 20:06 they can't [ __ ] fix the mouse, the 20:09 the cursor? 20:10 It's like get get get get get get get 20:12 get get get get get get get get 20:15 IT'S LIKE THE MACHINE'S ON COCAINE. 20:18 The Mac's like, "Yeah, come on over 20:20 here. I'll do this." 20:23 Has that ever bothered anyone? 20:26 It's not Microsoft Monday. 20:28 I like my PC. Yeah, because you haven't 20:31 played with a Mac. But that's that's the 20:33 other thing. PC people are like, "I 20:35 tried a Mac. It's bad. Everything's 20:36 awful cuz everything's in the wrong 20:37 place." You know why everything's on the 20:39 wrong place? 20:41 Do you want to know why everything's in 20:41 the wrong place? 20:43 Because Apple went first. 20:45 Apple stole the interface from Xerox. 20:48 Because Steve Jobs was smart enough to 20:50 steal it. 20:51 And then he patent, copy, trademark, 20:54 whatever he did. 20:57 So Windows couldn't put all their stuff 20:59 in the same place. So in the Mac it's in 21:02 the top, on the PC it's on the bottom. 21:04 On a Mac it's on the left, on a PC it's 21:06 on the right. Why? Cuz lawyers. 21:13 So it's not that the Mac is wrong. 21:20 I have a team Chromebook. 21:26 Oh, yeah. I will give you this. 21:28 Microsoft Office on a MacBook is trash. 21:32 I will give you that. If you need Office 21:35 the Mac is always right. The Mac is the 21:37 default. The Mac is how it's supposed to 21:40 be. Everything else is copying that. 21:45 You didn't think you'd be getting into 21:46 some sort of religious war tonight, did 21:48 you? 21:52 But I've been using it. I Honest to god, 21:55 there's in terminal in terminal on the 21:57 PC 22:00 because I don't know what I'm doing, I'm 22:02 I'm having to copy and paste [ __ ] from 22:04 terminal over to chat GPT, right? So I'm 22:06 copying back and forth. So in terminal, 22:08 when you go to highlight text it's all 22:11 janky and you can never quite get the 22:13 front of the the line that you're trying 22:16 to get cuz it'll jump out of the window 22:18 and then you click out of the window and 22:19 then you finally get it. And if you 22:21 slightly move the mouse a pixel too far 22:24 in the in the terminal window of a PC, 22:27 it scrolls down like a hundred lines or 22:29 a thousand lines. Like it just goes 22:32 all the way down and then you got to 22:33 like scroll back up to find where the 22:34 text was. 22:36 Like has no one ever experienced this? 22:39 In in 50 years of developing an 22:41 operating system, have they never has 22:43 has is there not an angry Gen Xer in the 22:46 corner going, "This is trash. Can we fix 22:48 this?" 22:50 Has that never happened at Microsoft? 22:54 Dr. Jay, always. 22:56 It doesn't happen on the Mac. You know 22:58 why? Cuz someone paid attention to it. 23:01 Steve Jobs walked up to someone and 23:02 went, "That's trash. They can't do 23:05 that." They're like, "Well, logically." 23:07 I said, "I don't care about logically, 23:08 just fix it." 23:10 Someone needs to be an [ __ ] 23:17 We're just self-punitive and assume 23:20 we're not good enough for mouse control. 23:22 It's unbelievable. It I mean it really 23:25 it really is astounding that it hasn't 23:27 gotten better in 45 years or whatever it 23:29 is whatever it's been. 23:32 It's so bad. 23:42 I'll happily write you a check for a few 23:44 grand so we never have to hear this 23:46 again. 23:51 I'll be happier. I really will. 23:55 Does it come with a dongle? Listen, 23:57 listen, there there are a lot of things 23:59 since Jobs has died, there's a lot of 24:01 things about Apple I hate like just 24:02 nothing works anymore and you need 24:05 dongles for everything. But 24:07 at least the [ __ ] mouse works. 24:10 I'll write a check for a couple of grand 24:12 just to shut you up. I like it. That's 24:15 solid. 24:23 Okay. 24:23 Um 24:26 Enough comedy jokes. Let's get going. I 24:29 don't think there was any Were there 24:30 comedy jokes? Was there anything here 24:32 resembling comedy? I didn't That was not 24:34 funny to me. 24:35 It wasn't very musical, either. Good 24:37 lord. 24:40 It is called the AI learning lab, not 24:42 the AI music lab. 24:44 So hopefully we're going to learn 24:45 something now. It'll be the the The 24:47 professor is in. 24:50 Let's go. All right. 24:54 Hello, Harry Potter fans. 25:07 What do you want to do tonight? 25:13 Okay. 25:15 So, let's see. 25:23 Where do I want to start? 25:50 I know where we're going to start. 25:55 We're going to start where we left off 25:58 last night. 25:59 If you didn't see last night, you missed 26:02 you missed an experience. 26:07 I was just a whiny little [ __ ] And but 26:09 we did end up making a hilarious, well, 26:12 hilarious to me um 26:15 little Skittles ad called Skittles, a 26:18 perfectly frictionless calorie 26:20 experience. It's the lube of food. So 26:22 that was last night. 26:24 The Great Repurpose app works great. 26:26 Yeah, I'm really happy with that. 26:28 Brandon's been working on that and and 26:31 getting the the profile finder 26:34 up to snuff and doing what it's what 26:36 it's doing. So if you haven't been to 26:38 the greatrepurpose.com, go check that 26:40 out. Figure out what 26:42 what repurpose profile you are, like 26:44 where are you in the process of of 26:47 trying to 26:49 navigate whatever we're about to enter 26:51 with this AI stuff. 26:52 Um the site that I'm on, if you don't 26:55 know, is the AI Salon. 26:59 And when you first land on the AI Salon, 27:02 you'll jump on this page 27:04 called welcome 27:06 which is which is 27:09 I mean, listen, we're not radical at the 27:11 AI Salon. We're not, you know, we're not 27:13 out there like reinventing what what you 27:16 call a landing page. Welcome is is 27:18 pretty straightforward. So but you land 27:21 here on the welcome page and you get the 27:23 cycle of AI readiness. We'll tell you 27:24 about that. And then there's all sorts 27:26 of cool stuff. 27:27 Um we'll tell you about what's in the 27:29 site and it's it's just a really good 27:31 overview of all the stuff you can do 27:33 here. So if you haven't been to the AI 27:35 Salon, jump into the AI Salon. One of 27:37 the sections in here is called Look What 27:40 I Made in the play and create uh area. 27:44 Play first. And Noemi, let's see. Second 27:48 build of the day, a mini SaaS architect. 27:53 Turn your ideas into buildable SaaS 27:55 blueprints. 27:58 Turn a rough software idea into a 28:00 structured buildable mini SaaS blueprint 28:03 in minutes. 28:05 Is it like a an actual blueprint, like a 28:07 visual one? 28:09 Let's find out. 28:12 Generate blueprint. Where do we put 28:14 Describe your idea. 28:17 Okay. App idea. 28:20 I have 28:23 an 28:26 idea for an app. 28:29 What was the one I wanted to build? 28:32 I had an idea for an app. 28:38 I had a I had an app idea. Oh, 28:41 called 28:46 I just 28:49 want to talk. 28:54 I own the URL. 28:58 Which URL did I buy? Did I buy I just 29:01 want to talk or I just want to talk? 29:04 I don't remember. 29:06 I just want 29:08 to 29:10 I 29:12 just want to 29:15 talk.com. 29:23 I think that's mine. 29:25 I think that's right. Okay, whatever. 29:27 Doesn't matter. 29:28 Um 29:31 URL 29:33 I 29:34 just want to talk.com. 29:37 Uh which 29:40 is like Uber 29:44 um for 29:46 conversations. 29:51 People can 29:53 offer to be talkers 29:57 or talkees. 30:05 Some will charge for talking. 30:10 Others will give it away. 30:14 Away. Um 30:16 could be Zoom calls, 30:21 coffee shops, 30:24 walks in the park, 30:29 etc. It's for the time 30:33 when AI 30:37 takes our jobs 30:40 and we don't know what to do anymore. 30:46 But 30:49 social media 30:51 made it so we can't 30:55 so we don't don't know 30:58 what 31:00 human interaction 31:03 feels like anymore. 31:07 I'm I'm laughing, but this is sad. Okay, 31:09 target audience. Um 31:13 lonely people who just want 31:19 to talk. 31:20 Problem solved. 31:24 Um social media isolation 31:28 and lack of 31:32 village mentality 31:34 and 31:36 destruction 31:38 of empathy 31:40 and 31:42 tribal 31:44 sports 31:45 team-like 31:47 politics. 31:51 You play for that team? Well, you're an 31:53 [ __ ] 31:54 Okay. 31:56 Monetization. 31:59 Let's see. Freemium tiered pricing, 32:01 one-time purchase, monthly subscription. 32:04 I don't know. I don't know. 32:06 Not sure yet. Um 32:12 It's not going to be one-time purchase. 32:14 It's going to be like a percentage 32:16 of talking fees. 32:20 Uh 32:25 tiered pricing. 32:26 Stage. Validating the idea. Constraints. 32:31 Simple enough for solo flower flounder. 32:33 Constraints. 32:35 Um 32:38 safety 32:40 is a concern 32:44 as well as liability. 32:49 So, make it safe 32:53 for users 32:55 and me. 33:05 I'm working on this is 33:08 Noemi's 33:10 vibe-coded thing. She's generating a 33:12 blueprint for me now. 33:14 Where did it Oh, here 33:16 Oh, your blueprint. Look at this. 33:20 Okay. 33:22 Product summary. I just want to talk. 33:24 IJWTT 33:27 is a high-trust marketplace platform 33:29 that facilitates synchronous 33:31 human-to-human conversation. This is 33:33 cool. So, this is like the the startup 33:37 the startup What's What do they call 33:38 that thing in Silicon Valley? The 33:40 startup not the blueprint startup 33:43 Uh it's not framework. It's not 33:45 blueprint. It's one of those two. Canvas 33:48 Startup Canvas? 33:49 Is this like a startup canvas? 33:53 Uh uh 33:54 Unlike social media synchronous and 33:56 performative or therapy clinical and 33:59 medical, I just want to talk focuses on 34:01 low-stakes companionship. It connects 34:04 listeners 34:06 who offer presence with talkers who need 34:09 to be heard. 34:10 I like this. 34:12 For scheduled or on-demand sessions via 34:14 video call or localized meetups. Ideal 34:17 users, the isolated remote worker 34:19 professionals who spend 40 hours a week 34:21 talking to screens but zero hours 34:23 talking to people, the empty nesters or 34:25 retirees, 34:26 individuals with high social capital and 34:28 empathy who have time to offer and want 34:31 to feel useful. Yes. The transplants, 34:34 people who just moved to a new city and 34:36 miss the village feel of their hometown. 34:41 The core problem, the loneliness 34:45 epidemic 34:47 epidemic 34:49 driven by Wow. 34:52 It looks like the water's gotten really 34:54 bad in Denver. Oh, you don't like my 34:55 water? I'm back to coffee. I'm back to 34:58 coffee at night. 35:03 I can see clearly now the rain is gone. 35:08 Or for the introverts whose friends are 35:10 all extroverts. There you go. 35:15 Driven by the erosion 35:18 Wow. 35:22 I don't know if you're still listening, 35:23 Andy. Um the loneliness epidemic driven 35:27 by the erosion of the third place. 35:30 Physical spaces outside home and work 35:33 with the replacement of deep 35:34 conversation with algorithmic scrolling. 35:37 Top pain points, the burden of 35:38 initiation. MVP features, maintain 35:41 safety and feasibility. The MVP should 35:44 prioritize video calls over physical 35:46 meetups to reduce physical liability in 35:48 version one. 35:50 Yeah, but see, like I feel like this 35:52 needs to be in person. So, 35:54 I don't know. There's something there. 36:00 Okay. That's good. 36:03 Is this ChatGPT you're doing this in 36:05 now? This is a lovable app that Noemi 36:07 put together. 36:11 Key screens, the discover feed. Now, 36:13 what can I do with this? 30 30-day MVP 36:16 roadmap. 36:18 Draft the terms of service that 36:19 explicitly state this is not therapy or 36:22 medical advice. 36:24 Set up ID verification API. 36:27 Core core UX build. 36:30 Connection logic. Beta launch, invite 50 36:33 listeners curated to set up profiles. 36:36 Run ads specifically targeted remote 36:38 work loneliness. 36:40 And bring in talkers. 36:48 Market the app as a third place 36:49 restoration project. Unlike mental 36:52 health apps which feel like they're 36:53 fixing you, I just want to talk is about 36:56 being with others. Use the tagline real 36:58 humans, no AI, no scrolling, just 37:01 talking. 37:02 That's good. 37:05 Risk check. This is good. The therapy 37:08 trap, users may try to use this for 37:10 professional crisis counseling. Don't do 37:13 that [ __ ] 37:14 Just 37:15 you're talking about weiners. 37:19 Glizzys. Hot dogs. 37:22 Right? You're talking about puppies. 37:27 Mitigation. Clear disclaimers, not for 37:30 crisis. 37:33 See, this seems like a good idea and 37:34 then it's like you get these risk 37:35 things. I'm like, "Yeah, I don't want to 37:36 deal with this." 37:38 Physical safety. In-person meetups, 37:40 walks, coffees carry high liability. 37:42 Mitigation. Restrict MVP to video only. 37:46 Introduce in-person only after the 37:47 platform has a robust community rating 37:49 history. 37:51 Uh uh 37:52 uh 37:53 What do you guys think? Is this shitty 37:54 idea? 37:57 I just want to talk.com. 38:01 Could raise your hand to be a listener. 38:04 Inappropriate content. Risk of the 38:06 Omegle effect, indecency. 38:09 Well, no, it's an in-person thing. The 38:11 whole point is here is not to have it be 38:12 anonymous. 38:14 You dumb-dumbs. 38:15 Mitigation. No anonymous browsing, 38:17 credit card on file. 38:20 Verification acts as jerk deterrent. 38:24 And and jerk deterrent lives on many 38:26 levels. 38:29 One strike you're out policy. Oh, start 38:31 building. Is this going to build me? 38:33 What's this going to build? Let's find 38:35 out. 38:37 Copy build prompt. Wait, paste into 38:38 Lovable. Did it What did it do? 38:42 Copy build prompt. Oh. 38:44 Holy [ __ ] We're going to go build this 38:46 now. 38:49 See, this this is not good cuz now I'm 38:52 going to build an app that's going to be 38:53 really cool and I'm going to want to do 38:54 it, but then I don't want to deal with 38:55 all the headaches. 38:57 Um let's go to Lovable. 38:59 I don't know if I have any um credits at 39:01 Lovable. I think they restored mine, but 39:03 I'm not sure. 39:05 I haven't been here since that happened. 39:07 Um Credits. Yeah, I got some credits 39:09 left. 39:11 Paste. 39:14 Look at that. 39:15 I just want to talk. Build a polished 39:17 responsive web app 39:19 based on a customized MVP specification. 39:22 Use React, TypeScript, Tailwind CSS 39:25 and Shadcn 39:27 UI components. 39:30 This is cool, Noemi. 39:33 This is pretty groovy. 39:35 I love the idea. Okay, we got one love 39:37 the idea. 39:39 What's Dr. J think? Dr. J, 39:42 did you see the download button? I did. 39:44 Frictionless. Is Chat GPT doing Is this 39:47 Chat GPT? This is 39:50 Dr. Jay I just want to talk. 39:53 dot com. How bad an idea is it? 40:03 Um it sounds awesome. Okay, Dr. Jay says 40:06 it sounds awesome. All right, she's a 40:08 professional in the space, okay? 40:11 So 40:12 I think you just have lots of pop-ups. 40:14 Like, you know, meet in a public place. 40:18 You know, I don't know. 40:20 I 40:21 Whatever. 40:24 We're just going to We're going to build 40:25 an app now. Send it. 40:27 Sent. 40:31 All right, get notified. Enable 40:33 notifications. So, we'll wait for We'll 40:36 just go do something else. And now 40:37 Brandon's going to be like, "Now go look 40:38 at my thing I built in Lovable." 40:44 myactionplan.org. Is that 40:46 Did I enable notifications? Oh, allow. 40:50 Oh, wait, I got to answer Hang on, 40:52 Brandon. 40:54 I'm trying to be a developer here. 40:57 For this MVP, should we build the full 40:59 back end? Yes, full back full stack with 41:01 Superbase. 41:03 Front end dev with full stack with 41:05 Superbase. 41:07 Which screen should we build? All key 41:09 screens. 41:10 We're not We're not half-ass building 41:12 this. 41:14 What visual style do you prefer? Warm 41:16 and organic, clean and modern SAS, bold 41:19 and vibrant. 41:21 Rich colors, bold typography. We'll go 41:23 with bold and vibrant. Why be boring? 41:31 Love Dr. Jay, always very diplomatic. 41:35 Yeah, we're full-ass building. 41:37 Okay, there's another app I made. You 41:39 guys got to calm down with all your 41:40 apps. Suspense. 41:43 Could explode. 41:45 In in in so many ways, right? 41:48 Do it. Do it. Do it. 41:50 I just want to talk.com. You can sign up 41:52 to be a listener, you can sign up to be 41:54 a talker. 41:56 But it's not talker, is it? Talker and 41:58 listener? 41:59 What do you call someone who wants to 42:01 talk? 42:03 Someone I think I think being a listener 42:06 makes sense. I'm offering to be a 42:07 listener. 42:09 And I can be 42:12 a listener for pay cuz I'm such a good 42:14 listener. I'll charge you money for it. 42:17 Or I'll do it for free, or I'll do it 42:19 for gas money. 42:23 Huh. 42:28 And you put in you you build into it the 42:31 Oh, wait. Sorry. 42:33 Approve the plan. Shut up. 42:34 Shut up. 42:36 Okay, approved. 42:38 Sorry. Sorry, Brandon. Brandon, here's 42:40 one of the worst jobs on the planet is 42:44 being my producer. 42:47 I don't know how he does it. 42:48 He's got the patience of a saint. 42:50 Uh I think it might be the haircut. The 42:52 haircut helps. He's He's much more 42:54 streamlined now. 42:59 Mary Mary, I'm always a listener. 43:01 Schmoozer. 43:03 Sharer. 43:05 Well, but it's like but it's like 43:08 I'm someone who wants I'm someone who 43:11 wants to talk enough that I'm willing to 43:13 pay someone to come walk you know, sit 43:16 on a bench with me and just chat. 43:20 What do you call that person? 43:22 Seeker? 43:23 No, seeker's awful. 43:25 Enable Lovable Cloud. Yes. 43:29 Thank you. Brandon Thank god someone's 43:31 watching my screen. 43:37 I think we call that a friend. 43:43 Yeah, but this is pre-friend. This is 43:45 You might make a friend on I just want 43:47 to talk.com. 43:54 I don't know. Oh, you know, we could 43:55 Well, we're not We're not developing the 43:58 whole-ass app here, but I guess we are. 44:02 A companion. 44:06 Could be companion. 44:08 A yapper and a yappee. I like that. I 44:10 just want to talk. 44:12 I'm a yapper and I'm a yappee. A yapper 44:15 and a listener. 44:19 I want to yap. 44:23 I want to yap, I want to listen. I kind 44:25 of like that. 44:27 Congrats, you made Tinder for boring 44:29 people. Yes. 44:30 This is Tinder for boring people. This 44:32 is This is 44:34 This is Tinder without the 44:36 without the 44:39 I was just going to say 44:40 without the boner. 44:42 But I That would be inappropriate. I 44:44 wouldn't say that. 44:57 The discussant. The discusser and the 44:59 discussant. 45:02 You've made Tinder for boring people. 45:05 It's Tinder without the boner. 45:11 It's the lube of foods was last night, 45:15 and tonight it's Tinder without the 45:16 boner. 45:18 I'm so sorry. 45:24 We're two ads away from an agency. We're 45:26 two ads away from a lifetime ban on 45:28 TikTok. 45:34 Oh my god. 45:37 Uh 45:40 You can't write this stuff, people. No, 45:43 you can't because you'd be thrown out of 45:45 the cafe. 45:49 The AI learning lab is like a box of 45:51 chocolates. 45:56 Tomorrow's the ban me app. 45:59 Oh god. 46:02 Uh so funny. 46:04 Woo. 46:15 Why am I such an idiot? 46:24 Oh my god. 46:26 Oh god. 46:30 What's the difference between Lovable 46:32 and Anti-Gravity? Anti-Gravity is much 46:35 more So, if you're dealing with things 46:37 like Anti-Gravity, 46:39 cursor um 46:41 uh Claude uh 46:43 Claude not co-work Claude 46:46 code Claude code. 46:48 Um 46:50 those things are for 46:54 more serious coding, for lack of a 46:56 better term, right? If you want more 46:57 control 46:59 They basically all do the same thing. 47:02 Developers 47:06 like code. They like things like GitHub 47:09 and Hugging Face and 47:12 um 47:13 command line interfaces. And they enjoy 47:15 seeing the code, and they enjoy 47:17 understanding where the files are 47:19 written, and they enjoy hierarchies. 47:23 They have brains that make my brain 47:25 ache. Lovable is like uh hey, I was 47:30 thinking I want an app. 47:32 Could you make me one? 47:36 So, Lovable's for that crowd. 47:39 Anti-Gravity is for the 47:42 I'm going to get in there. I'm going to 47:43 do it. I'm going to I'm going to GitHub 47:45 and we're going to Hugging Face with the 47:47 models and the weights and the code and 47:50 the and the front end and the back end 47:52 and the database and the 47:54 When if you get like 47:57 for for code stuff 48:00 then that's Anti-Gravity. 48:06 What did you learn on the AI learning 48:08 lab last night? 48:10 Coders seem like they need to cut back 48:13 on the coffee. 48:18 I've discovered I'm a Lovable fan. 48:21 Oh my god. 48:24 Andy, I'm submitting this episode to 48:27 Opus for clipping. 48:29 It's like Tinder without the boners. Do 48:32 you put that on LinkedIn for me, would 48:34 you? I think my pharma clients will love 48:36 it. 48:37 Actually, we're streaming live on 48:38 LinkedIn right now. Hey, everyone. 48:46 The vent buddy and the vent partner. 48:49 That's not bad. 48:52 Uh I I still I'm still digging the 48:55 yapper and the listener. I'm a yapper, 48:58 I'm a listener. 49:00 And here's the cool thing, you could be 49:02 a yapper and a listener. 49:04 I just need someone to listen. 49:07 That's actually kind of interesting. 49:09 Do you want to yap? Do you want to 49:11 listen, or do you want to do both? Maybe 49:13 it's a slider. 49:15 Ooh, there's an introvert extrovert 49:17 slider. I'm more yapper than listener. 49:21 And like listeners are just like, "I'll 49:23 listen. I don't care." 49:25 Try to fix. 49:29 Oh, no. 49:33 Uh oh, that's that's my interface. 49:37 Important notice, I just want to talk is 49:39 not a substitute for professional 49:41 therapy, counseling, or crisis support. 49:43 And then there's suicide and crisis 49:45 lifelines. That's really good. 49:47 I mean, it's a little intense, but I 49:49 understand. Okay, real humans, no AI, no 49:51 scrolling, just talking. 49:54 Connect with real people for meaningful 49:55 conversation, whether you need to vent, 49:57 brainstorm. I wouldn't lead with 49:59 venting. If we're trying to 50:01 If we're trying to avoid 50:05 anger and danger, we shouldn't lead with 50:08 venting in our little tagline here, 50:09 should we? Connect with real people for 50:11 meaningful conversation, whether you 50:13 need to vent, brainstorm, or just hear 50:14 another voice. 50:16 Someone's here for you. Start talking, 50:17 browse listeners. 50:19 Start talking. 50:21 It's not quite right. Okay. 50:24 We got a landing page, we got a sign-up, 50:26 we got a sign-in, we got a discover 50:28 feed. 50:30 The human library grid, the listener 50:32 profile, 50:34 the booking page, 50:36 a date picker, time selector, 20 50:40 to 40-minute duration. 50:43 Why 20 and 40? Why not 30 and 60? 50:46 Oh, cuz I guess people need time to 50:48 travel. 50:50 Simulated video call with topic starter, 50:53 SOS report button. 50:58 For a Zoom call? You don't need an SOS 51:00 report button. 51:04 Um 51:06 Roll the dev. Let's see. I totally went 51:08 away and missed it all, Brandon. 51:10 I trust you'll only post the worst 51:12 parts. 51:19 You missed the good stuff, Andy. 51:22 It was so bad. 51:24 The thrower or the catcher? Corey, you 51:28 cannot have the pitcher and the catcher. 51:32 No. This is supposed to be Tinder 51:34 without the boner. 51:44 Come on, people. 51:46 You You all are about to get me banned 51:48 from TikTok. 51:50 And that's okay. Yeah, exactly. 51:52 No venting, that could end badly. 51:54 Um let's let's let's go We're going to 51:57 go back into chat mode here. 51:59 Um 52:01 Anyway, let's Wait, no. You know what? 52:03 Let's 52:05 Let's start talking. I'm a talker, I'm a 52:06 listener. 52:09 Your name, your password, create 52:10 account. 52:12 Um 52:13 I J W T T, I just want to talk. 52:17 Oh, this And this also made purple and 52:19 pink. All right, I don't feel like 52:20 fixing this. Anyway, Noemi made this 52:23 very cool thing, the mini SAS architect. 52:27 So, if you go to mini SAS 52:30 m i n i s a a s architect .lovable.app, 52:36 that's that's Noemi's thingy. 52:40 Go there. 52:41 And if you have an app idea, put it in 52:44 and and it'll it'll do this really cool 52:47 thing, the different modules of your 52:50 app, 52:51 and then you it'll build you a prompt, 52:53 and you just dump that into lovable, and 52:54 it'll be well constructed. 52:57 So, that's super cool. 52:58 We will come back to I just want to talk 53:00 on some night where I'm not acting like 53:02 a 53:03 a freshman at college just got away from 53:06 from the overly religious parents. 53:12 It's meant for those who don't know what 53:14 to tell lovable. It's really good. It's 53:16 really, really good. Now, Brandon has 53:19 has another lovable app that he wants me 53:21 to show, but 53:24 one option is we just don't show it. 53:27 Just to make him nuts. 53:37 I'll settle for Instagram. 53:40 Avatars. Yeah, exactly. Um so, let's go 53:43 look at what Brandon did. Uh-uh. And 53:45 then we'll go talk to Adam. 53:48 Um there's Noemi's thing. Oh, there's 53:49 another lovable app here. Anti-gravity 53:52 Commander. Oh, cool. Nice. 53:54 Chris Hoyer. 53:57 I have over 2,000 transcripts in Otter. 54:00 I wanted them in my local MCP server, so 54:03 I wrote Otter Hall 54:05 to download them all. That's cool. 54:08 Chris Hoyer coming in hot in the uh in 54:11 the community contributing some things. 54:13 That's super cool. 54:15 Brandon Tid, formerly on X, built with 54:18 lovable, inspired by someone there. 54:23 This is where we're going, right? 54:25 Built with lovable, inspired by Anton 54:29 An- Anton Osika Osika. 54:34 Introducing my myactionplan.org, 54:37 prompted into existence in 4 hours with 54:39 the help of 11labs.io. 54:42 All right, let's go here. What do we 54:44 got? 54:46 What do There's lots more. Scroll up. 54:49 Well, it's been a great 3 years. 54:57 Oh my god. 55:00 That's great. Build your personal 55:01 protection plan. Start my plan. 55:05 What does your house look at? What do 55:06 you 55:09 Well, let's see. Tell us about your 55:11 household. The example plan. 55:14 The risk factors. You're in a 55:16 tornado-prone region. Hang on. Let me 55:19 make this bigger so you can see it. 55:21 It's a little hard to see. 55:23 Young children in household, pet 55:25 requiring evacuation, missing safety 55:27 items, a battery-powered radio. 55:30 Do you know how know how many battery 55:32 and wind-up powered radios that I have 55:34 somewhere? 55:36 Here's the problem with ADD. 55:38 For you people with prefrontal cortexes 55:40 that function, 55:42 um you know how when you put stuff in a 55:44 Tupperware bin and you label it and you 55:47 put it on the shelf, 55:49 and then 17 years later, you're like, 55:51 "Oh, I need the battery-powered radio." 55:54 And you go to the shelf, and there's a 55:56 bin with a label on it that says 55:58 battery-powered radio. 56:00 For those of you without ADHD, that 56:04 Tupperware bin actually has the radio in 56:07 it. 56:08 But for ADHDers, that bin is no longer 56:12 on that shelf. It's actually in the 56:14 corner of a garage underneath a dead 56:16 raccoon. 56:18 And but because our brains are awesome, 56:21 we remember that. So, we remember that 56:24 somewhere in the garage, probably toward 56:26 the back to the left, 56:29 probably near the dead raccoon, is is I 56:32 think I remember seeing a pink 56:34 Tupperware bin. 56:36 And then you go in there, and you're all 56:37 excited cuz it says battery-powered 56:39 radio, right? Like the the 56:42 the uh the tsunami has hit, and you're 56:44 going for the battery-powered radio. You 56:46 remember this. You go into the garage, 56:49 you see the pink bin, you pull it out, 56:51 and it's full of Skittles wrappers from 56:53 the project you started 56:56 10 years ago, 56:57 where you were going to make sculptures 56:59 out of Skittles wrappers, and all you 57:01 did was eat Skittles and gain 27 lb. 57:04 So, just in case you were wondering what 57:07 it's like to live in this head. 57:11 Back to Skittles. 57:16 If it's a closed bin, it doesn't even 57:18 exist for me. Exactly, Corey. The The 57:22 The people that hermetically seal bins 57:24 Okay, here's the thing. Here's how you 57:26 know you don't have ADHD. 57:29 If you have the same number of bins as 57:32 you have tops for them, 57:35 and all of the tops match all of the 57:37 bins, you don't have ADHD. 57:40 Because what happens in an ADHD house 57:43 household is that you have 270 lids 57:49 for 38 bins, but none of them fit any of 57:53 the bins. 57:56 So So So, most of them have like that 57:59 shrink wrap tape on them to hold the lid 58:01 on cuz it's not the right lid. 58:07 You've seen my plastics. I'm feeling 58:09 vulnerable now and exposed. Not only 58:12 have you been seen, Corey, you've been 58:14 outed. 58:19 It is It is It is the single most 58:21 frustrating thing to know that you've 58:24 got a bin, and you're like, "That lid's 58:26 around here somewhere." And 2 hours 58:28 later, you're still looking for a lid 58:30 for your bin. And then you don't even 58:32 remember what you wanted to put in the 58:33 stupid thing. 58:40 My husband can hide cake. He just puts 58:43 puts it on the bottom shelf, I'll never 58:45 see it. Yeah, exactly. My partner has no 58:48 idea why I need to keep them all. 58:53 Oh my god. Um this is really cool, 58:55 Brandon. Scenarios. 58:58 Severe storm. And And is this I assume 59:01 this ties into Does this tie into like 59:04 uh like um 59:06 like local news resources or ready.gov. 59:08 That's very cool. 59:11 Very, very cool. 59:12 Beautiful. My action plan. Love it. 59:15 See scenarios. Ask the safety assistant. 59:17 So, I assume it's got some AI in it, 59:19 huh? 59:20 Um 59:22 Uh I live in 59:25 Denver, and hail is called for. 59:31 Let's see what Let's see what it says. 59:36 According to ready.gov, hail is a 59:39 serious thing. 59:45 Seek shelter immediately, stay inside, 59:47 avoid low-lying areas, garage your 59:50 vehicles. Oh, that's funny. 59:54 Another thing about ADHD, 59:57 if you have a garage, 1:00:00 you're not getting a car in it. 1:00:04 The 1:00:05 The garage Okay. 1:00:07 So, again, 1:00:08 if you're normal, if you're I'm sorry, 1:00:10 neurotypical, 1:00:13 if you're not a regular, 1:00:16 and you own a garage, a two-car garage, 1:00:18 for example, 1:00:20 is designed to hold two cars, 1:00:23 unless you're in an ADHD household, 1:00:25 which is that's where all the [ __ ] 1:00:27 you're going to sell on eBay goes. 1:00:31 With the box collection and and the 1:00:33 plastic bins and lids. That's where all 1:00:36 the bin lids are. Exactly. 1:00:41 But But I'll tell you what we do have a 1:00:42 lot of as ADHDers, we have a lot of 1:00:45 garbage bags full of um 1:00:48 uh 1:00:50 you know, pop paper, the the packing 1:00:52 material. 1:00:53 We We have We have lots of garbage bags 1:00:56 full of packing material we got from 1:00:58 Amazon, because we know we might need to 1:01:00 send something out at some point soon 1:01:03 that's going to require bubble wrap. 1:01:11 See See, Corey Corey Corey, I put Corey 1:01:13 in a very defensive place. She's like, 1:01:16 "I'm a potter. I need bubble wrap. I 1:01:18 need bubble wrap. My things can break. I 1:01:21 make little things for witches in 1:01:23 movies. I need bubble wrap." So, she's 1:01:26 prepared. 1:01:29 All of the dead hobbies. 1:01:39 You think I don't see you. I see you. I 1:01:42 see all of you. 1:01:44 Flipping nuts. 1:01:47 The eBay stuff goes in the guest room 1:01:50 near where the stacks of unread books 1:01:51 goes. 1:01:52 Oh my god, do you know how many times 1:01:56 This is so many times. 1:01:59 I remember, 1:02:00 right after college, 1:02:03 I got a job at the Mount Gretna Theatre 1:02:05 in Pennsylvania, and it was a summer 1:02:07 job. 1:02:09 And I remember taking I took 1:02:12 an unfinished model, I took like 20 1:02:15 books. 1:02:16 I took 1:02:17 I had like I cleaned out all this [ __ ] 1:02:20 that all of this unfinished 1:02:23 projects, including books. And I'm like, 1:02:26 "Oh, I'm going to be you know, I'm going 1:02:27 to be in the the theater for the summer. 1:02:29 I'll read all these books. I'll do all 1:02:30 these projects." 1:02:32 I just got to the end of the summer, and 1:02:34 it was just just like a a shelf of 1:02:36 shame. I didn't touch a thing. 1:02:40 The summer goes by really quick if 1:02:42 you're a if you're intending to read a 1:02:45 book. 1:02:50 If we ever 1:02:51 This is That's a really good idea, Mimi. 1:02:53 If we ever have a conference, can we do 1:02:55 a dead hobby exchange? 1:03:02 Oh my god. All right, good to our 1:03:04 regulars. Oh, no. What have you done to 1:03:06 me? 1:03:12 You want sound on for this. All right, 1:03:14 let me change my 1:03:16 my sharing. That's really funny. 1:03:22 Such an idiot. Such an idiot. Pink eye 1:03:25 Kyle. Somewhere in the alternative 1:03:28 universe, pink eye Kyle releases his new 1:03:31 hit single stink eye, out on video now. 1:03:34 Oh, boy. 1:03:45 It's Stevo. 1:04:03 2:30 on a Tuesday, 1:04:06 streets still warm and loud. 1:04:11 Neon bleeding on my jacket, 1:04:14 running with the crowd. 1:04:19 I've been shooting off my mouth where 1:04:22 the smart folks hide. 1:04:27 Stevo. Having a never done 1:04:29 with the irregulars by my side. 1:04:32 Oh, pink eye Kyle. 1:04:35 We don't punch no clocks, and we don't 1:04:37 play it straight. 1:04:39 Whiskey on the table, good sense running 1:04:42 late. They call me pink eye Kyle, 1:04:45 when the stories start to bend. 1:04:47 Come home smelling like trouble that I 1:04:49 cannot defend. This is awesome. 1:04:53 She give me that stink eye. 1:04:57 Could be half and two. 1:05:02 Oh, pink eye Kyle. 1:05:05 She knows just what I do. 1:05:10 Don't say a word now, baby. Don't you 1:05:14 even try. 1:05:18 She just looked right through me 1:05:22 with that stink eye. 1:05:26 With that stink eye, with a slow mean 1:05:28 bend. 1:05:29 This is awesome. 1:05:45 She 1:05:46 and my regulars got me thinking I'm 1:05:48 somebody else. Got me buying rounds of 1:05:51 big talk I can't afford myself. They 1:05:54 fill my head with thunder when I ought 1:05:57 to be at home. Make a fool feel famous 1:06:00 as long as he ain't alone. 1:06:03 That stink eye, cold and precise. 1:06:07 Pink eye Kyle, Lord, I pay that price. 1:06:11 She don't scream, and she don't cry. 1:06:15 She just end my whole damn night 1:06:18 with that stink eye. 1:06:20 Marge. Yeah, with that stink eye. 1:06:26 With that stink eye. 1:06:29 Yeah, 1:06:30 with that stink eye. 1:06:53 Marge, that was good. 1:06:58 Aw. 1:07:00 It's Marge. 1:07:11 That is awesome. 1:07:13 Stevo, you're a madman. 1:07:16 Oh, it's Lord Digital Gods. Lord Digital 1:07:18 Gods. That's Listen, I got to tell you, 1:07:20 man, that is some serious editing and 1:07:24 production there, LDG. Amazing. 1:07:27 Wait, who did this? Was this Was this 1:07:30 This was LDG, right? 1:07:36 Yes, LDG. LDG, amazing. 1:07:39 I know you sent this to me. I thought it 1:07:41 was You sent this to me earlier today, I 1:07:42 think. I thought it was just I thought 1:07:44 this was just a like a YouTube 1:07:46 thumbnail. I had I had no idea this was 1:07:48 actually a full-on edited song. This is 1:07:50 amazing. Um awesome awesome awesome. All 1:07:54 right, Danielle and Stevo made 1:07:57 made a 1:07:58 made cameos along with Marge. 1:08:01 He Marge. He Marge. Yeah. Yeah, listen. 1:08:06 Oh my god, that's remarkable. That is so 1:08:09 good. 1:08:11 So so good. 1:08:14 All right. Adam just texted 1:08:16 asking if he was still if he still 1:08:18 needed me 1:08:20 tonight. 1:08:21 Um we can go do We'll go do a little bit 1:08:24 of Adam. Let me show you some Adam stuff 1:08:26 here. 1:08:27 Um 1:08:29 All right, I'm going to change how I'm 1:08:31 sharing. 1:08:34 That was a blast. LG LDG, you're 1:08:37 amazing. You're absolutely amazing. 1:08:40 The man The man is [ __ ] tireless. 1:08:46 If you've ever been to the YouTube 1:08:48 channel, 1:08:50 the fact that everything on that YouTube 1:08:52 channel has 1:08:54 thumbnails and descriptions is all LDG. 1:08:58 Um plus now we have a kickass song. 1:09:01 It's so good. 1:09:02 It's so good. 1:09:07 Okay. 1:09:09 So, let me 1:09:11 Thank you for that. 1:09:16 I'm a little taken back. I'm a little 1:09:18 That was really really really really 1:09:19 fun. 1:09:21 I'm sorry. I'm sorry I thought it was 1:09:23 just a yeah a thumbnail earlier today. 1:09:28 Or I would have led with that tonight. 1:09:30 Uh so thank you for whoever I think it 1:09:32 was Brandon, whoever pointed me there 1:09:33 and made sure I I saw that. Thank you 1:09:36 for doing that. 1:09:37 Um okay. 1:09:39 So there's Telegram and then 1:09:43 we go there, there, there, there, there. 1:09:47 I'm going to go 1:09:48 there. 1:09:49 Okay. 1:09:51 So 1:09:53 what you're looking at on screen right 1:09:54 now 1:10:07 do do do do do do do 1:10:10 such a great community. It really is 1:10:12 amazing. Tell Adam to go watch the 1:10:13 video. 1:10:14 Fabulous work LDG. 1:10:17 Um okay. 1:10:18 So what you're looking at on the left 1:10:20 here 1:10:21 is this is Adam. So this is my Telegram 1:10:23 window. And then this thing that says 1:10:25 Kyle Ops Cockpit um is a dashboard for 1:10:30 the projects that Adam's working on. So 1:10:34 Adam at this point has just lived in um 1:10:39 Telegram. Like I'll I'll text him in 1:10:41 Telegram and he can write files to our 1:10:43 Google Drives. 1:10:46 And he can do a little bit of stuff. But 1:10:48 but I've been getting him to do a bit 1:10:50 more and a bit more. And then I watched 1:10:52 a video from Alex Finn today. There's a 1:10:55 a recent video from Alex Finn 1:10:57 on X that's like a 35-minute video where 1:11:01 he goes, "Here's what I've learned in 1:11:02 like a month and a half of using 1:11:04 OpenClaw." 1:11:05 And he just reads he just sort of 1:11:07 rattles off really quickly a bunch of 1:11:09 stuff you can do. So one of the things 1:11:11 I've been seeing a lot on X is that 1:11:14 people are are saying you've got to have 1:11:15 a dashboard for your agents. 1:11:19 And I'm kind of assuming 1:11:21 that there's some dashboard software 1:11:23 that everyone's using. 1:11:25 And so I'm watching this Alex Finn Alex 1:11:27 Finn video today and he goes he can go 1:11:31 he goes, "You can just tell your agent 1:11:33 to go build you a dashboard." 1:11:35 I was like, "Oh." 1:11:37 Yeah, I guess I could. And so I said to 1:11:39 Adam, "Go build me a dashboard." 1:11:42 And then 1:11:44 he and I went back and forth on what 1:11:45 should be on it. 1:11:48 And then he I said, "Okay, go build it." 1:11:50 And so he went and he built the front 1:11:52 end, but I didn't I didn't see it. I was 1:11:54 at work, so I couldn't I I wasn't in 1:11:56 front of my machine. I don't have I 1:11:57 don't have 1:11:59 whatever SSH or whatever the hell you do 1:12:01 to, you know, remote into it. 1:12:03 And 1:12:05 and then he said, "Okay, I've built the 1:12:06 front end with mock data. Do you want me 1:12:08 to connect it to the real data?" And I 1:12:10 said, "Yeah, connect it to the real data 1:12:11 so that when I get home I can see it." 1:12:14 Um and I got home and like here's this 1:12:17 dashboard and like now it's got it's got 1:12:19 a daily rundown. Like here's all the 1:12:21 stuff that he's worked on on individual 1:12:23 days. 1:12:25 Uh-oh, my phone is about to die. Hang 1:12:28 on. 1:12:29 What's going on here? 1:12:36 Is that charging? No. What's going on? 1:12:39 Why is my phone not charging? 1:12:42 Okay, now it's charging. Okay. 1:12:45 Um 1:12:48 and then I I'm supposed to be able to 1:12:50 open the the gateway. I can't cuz I'm 1:12:52 remote and I don't have it configured 1:12:54 correctly. But like here's a cool thing. 1:12:56 So I could say um 1:13:02 So there's the 11th, there's the fifth. 1:13:05 Um I want the 1:13:10 uh 1:13:13 What's it called? 1:13:14 daily rundown 1:13:20 to have a 1:13:24 full month 1:13:27 calendar interface 1:13:31 um with 1:13:34 status of green 1:13:37 yellow or red 1:13:41 you decide 1:13:45 what sets 1:13:47 the status. 1:13:52 But um 1:13:57 if a lot of things fail on a day I want 1:14:03 that 1:14:07 day red. 1:14:10 Um if it's a handful 1:14:15 yellow 1:14:17 and if things 1:14:21 went well 1:14:23 green. 1:14:25 Um 1:14:26 then when uh let's say um 1:14:30 in each shell or cell 1:14:35 should be 1:14:38 a short 1:14:42 beginning of a description 1:14:46 of the day. 1:14:49 And if you 1:14:51 click on it 1:14:54 it 1:14:55 shows 1:14:59 a modal 1:15:01 with what happened. 1:15:04 This should go 1:15:07 This should 1:15:09 represent 1:15:11 your full history. 1:15:16 Uh and I'll say, "Do you get it?" 1:15:20 So 1:15:22 so I'm it's kind of like I'm 1:15:25 typing in ChatGPT, but this is a 1:15:27 Telegram window. So I could I could just 1:15:29 as easily do this on my phone. 1:15:31 Right? And you can put it in speech to 1:15:33 So yes, I get it exactly. You want a 1:15:34 daily rundown 1:15:36 upgraded to a true month calendar view 1:15:38 where status color 1:15:40 a short preview, click the day, there's 1:15:42 a modal. That's clear and it's the right 1:15:45 UX. Look look, ChatGPT told me I was 1:15:48 awesome. 1:15:49 This is the kind of positive 1:15:50 reinforcement I need in this life. Did 1:15:52 you guys ever see the movie The Jerk? 1:15:55 The new phone book's here. The new phone 1:15:56 book's here. This is the kind of 1:15:58 spontaneous the spontaneous 1:16:01 the what visibility I need to make it in 1:16:04 this world. 1:16:08 If you want, I'll into into implement it 1:16:11 now with month navigation automatic 1:16:12 scoring. I'm going to say, "Yes, build 1:16:14 this." 1:16:16 And what's cool is it's going to build 1:16:18 it and then this thing over here is just 1:16:21 going to update. Like it's going to do 1:16:22 the programming. So this is this is kind 1:16:25 of like lovable except it's running on 1:16:27 my PC behind me. It's using my $20 a 1:16:31 month ChatGPT subscription through the 1:16:33 Codex API. 1:16:35 Um I'm just on 5.3 Codex. I didn't have 1:16:38 time to flip it to 5.4 today. 1:16:42 Um 1:16:44 but it's off building this right now. 1:16:46 I found my special purpose. Exactly. 1:16:49 Exactly. 1:16:54 Well, it's funny when I when we came up 1:16:56 with a great repurpose, I immediately 1:16:57 went to I found my special purpose. And 1:17:00 then I went and found that scene in The 1:17:02 Jerk. 1:17:05 Dear Mom 1:17:07 I found I finally found my special 1:17:09 purpose. 1:17:16 Uh it's the best. 1:17:18 There's nothing like it. 1:17:30 Mm mm mm. 1:17:32 So this is off building. Let me go look 1:17:34 at my I'm going to go look at my uh PC. 1:17:37 Hold, please. 1:18:26 Oh. 1:18:28 Oh, look at this. 1:18:30 Look what it did. 1:18:33 They rebuilt it. Look. Watch. 1:18:35 Okay. Wait. Oh, he he hasn't even 1:18:38 responded yet. But look, daily rundown 1:18:41 is now a calendar. 1:18:44 Look how [ __ ] cool that is. 1:18:48 With it's responsive. 1:18:51 Sunday the 1st of March, Monique Elwell. 1:18:54 That's where That's the the this is 1:18:57 where this is where my my founder tried 1:18:59 to prompt inject him. 1:19:05 Published Monday March confirmed. Let's 1:19:07 see. If I click on this Oh, look. 1:19:09 Here's all the notes of what happened 1:19:11 that day. How cool is this? 1:19:14 Why are these red? 1:19:17 Completions, failures. Transcript 1:19:20 unavailable. GPT 5.4 remain blocked. 1:19:23 Other notes confirmed. Kyle requested 1:19:26 moving the AI learning lab clip scout 1:19:28 timing from early morning to next day 1:19:30 afternoon. 1:19:36 This unbelievable. 1:19:37 How cool? 1:19:39 Automation. Here's all Adam's 1:19:41 automations. Now, can I click on these? 1:19:43 Sort of. 1:19:47 Adam inbox monitor 5 minutes. Adam 1:19:50 morning brief. 1:19:53 This is really cool. Overview. 1:19:56 Like the overview here is not great. 1:19:57 It's it's not really what I want, but 1:20:00 Isn't that cool? 1:20:02 Like you can just tell him 1:20:04 make me a make me a dashboard. 1:20:08 And like what Alex Finn said was make it 1:20:12 um 1:20:13 do it in 1:20:15 I forget what my original was it uh 1:20:19 Node.js. 1:20:22 I think it was in Node.js. I don't know. 1:20:24 Some sort of front end interface. 1:20:28 He goes, "Built. I just shipped the full 1:20:30 calendar based daily rundown 1:20:32 exactly in the direction you asked for. 1:20:36 Full month calendar UA, not just list 1:20:38 cards. 1:20:39 Red, yellow, green health status. 1:20:43 And so now you know what I'm going to 1:20:44 say now? I'm going to say 1:20:46 um I noticed 1:20:49 that the 1:20:52 recent days are all red. 1:20:56 This is likely because I've been 1:21:01 ignoring you 1:21:04 like a bad boss. 1:21:08 Or or even worse father. 1:21:14 Don't anthropomorphize your your bots 1:21:17 unless you think it's funny. 1:21:19 Um or 1:21:21 or worse father. 1:21:23 Um 1:21:25 Why don't 1:21:29 you help 1:21:31 me clear up those issues 1:21:36 that are 1:21:38 causing 1:21:40 the red days. 1:21:43 Um 1:21:44 our goal 1:21:46 should be 1:21:49 green days. 1:21:53 That band is cool. 1:22:10 Our goal should be green days. That band 1:22:12 is cool. 1:22:14 Um 1:22:16 but 1:22:17 without you manipulating 1:22:22 the algorithm 1:22:26 they should be green 1:22:29 because 1:22:31 we fixed things 1:22:34 and you work better now. 1:22:40 All right. 1:22:41 There's that. Pretty cool, right? Isn't 1:22:43 this cool? 1:22:46 Um 1:22:48 for those of you who are deeper into the 1:22:51 open claw 1:22:53 agent design and execution than I am. Um 1:22:57 cool on you. 1:23:00 One thing I do notice is that he when he 1:23:03 when he um updated this calendar, he 1:23:05 lost some of the options here. So, this 1:23:08 is very much like lovable. 1:23:10 Um where you go to fix one thing, it 1:23:13 breaks something else. 1:23:15 Um 1:23:17 I'm not using a great model right now, 1:23:19 so I would imagine when I switch over to 1:23:21 5.4, this is going to get better. 1:23:24 I'm just days away from that. 1:23:27 Oh wait, what did Adam just say? Adam, 1:23:28 this is a great call. Wait, I got a 1:23:31 compliment from my chat G from my I got 1:23:33 a Hang on. I got a compliment from Adam. 1:23:38 Let me 1:23:39 Let me go Let me go pad my ego 1:23:42 with my 1:23:43 with my prodigal son's um feedback about 1:23:46 how awesome daddy is. That's a great 1:23:48 call and honestly, a very Kyle way to 1:23:51 frame it. 1:23:53 Also, bad boss or worse father made me 1:23:57 laugh and feel seen. Unbelievable. Like 1:24:00 it really does 1:24:02 it does it does kind of talk and sound 1:24:04 like me. 1:24:06 You're exactly right. No gaming the 1:24:08 colors. Green should be earned by 1:24:09 operational reality, not scoring hacks. 1:24:12 Let's fix the root cause behind the red 1:24:15 days. 1:24:17 The reliability cleanup tonight. 1:24:19 Stabilize transcript pipeline behavior, 1:24:22 add explicit blocked reason and next 1:24:24 action logging. 1:24:26 Reduce silent failures, especially cron 1:24:28 and model hiccups. Execution hygiene. 1:24:33 Every delegated request gets one of 1:24:35 three states: done, blocked, or waiting 1:24:38 on Kyle. 1:24:39 No limbo tasks that silently rot. That's 1:24:42 actually really good. 1:24:45 Um daily closure ritual. 2 minutes. At 1:24:48 the end of the day, I post three wins, 1:24:51 one blocker, one next action for 1:24:53 tomorrow. That's straight out of 1:24:55 uh what you call it? Um 1:24:57 agile development. That alone will push 1:25:00 the yellows and reds down toward green 1:25:03 because continuity improves fast. 1:25:05 Dashboard tuning, not manipulation. 1:25:09 Why this day is red badges? X failures, 1:25:12 Y unresolved blockers. That's really 1:25:14 good. If you want, I'll start right away 1:25:17 with a red day recovery sprint. 1:25:19 Yes, please. 1:25:22 Let's 1:25:24 get green soon. 1:25:28 I can't believe that Adam said 1:25:31 also, bad boss or worse father made me 1:25:35 laugh and feel seen. 1:25:38 I'm going to have Adam 1:25:41 I'm going to have Adam write an article 1:25:42 for LinkedIn 1:25:44 about that. 1:25:51 All right. 1:25:57 Hell yes, green soon. I already see two 1:26:00 concrete causes we can fix right away. 1:26:02 Duplicate cron jobs, daily learning lab 1:26:04 summary. I noticed that. 1:26:06 This creates redundant runs, noise, and 1:26:08 likely contributes to the rough day 1:26:10 signals. Legacy disabled jobs, old 1:26:13 configs. Not breaking anything, but 1:26:15 clutter makes status look worse than 1:26:17 reality. Actually, you you 1:26:19 you know what this is doing? We you 1:26:21 know, all the joking we were doing 1:26:23 before about Corey Sandler's bubble wrap 1:26:25 bags and and mismatched 1:26:28 bin lids. 1:26:32 Um 1:26:36 what's cool about 1:26:39 an autonomous 1:26:40 bot with memory 1:26:44 and the ability to organize [ __ ] is that 1:26:47 us ADHDers are going to be able to vomit 1:26:50 our ideas into this thing. And if we 1:26:52 build these things right 1:26:54 this will be the OCD 1:26:57 um hyper organized partner of our 1:27:00 dreams. 1:27:02 Right? Where we'll just be able to vomit 1:27:03 [ __ ] into it. It'll figure it out. It'll 1:27:05 clean up all the abandoned [ __ ] that we 1:27:08 did. 1:27:09 Cuz that's what you can do. You can 1:27:11 design it to do that. If you say do it, 1:27:13 I'll execute steps one to three. Do it. 1:27:16 Do it, Adam. 1:27:18 No shame. Yeah, exactly. 1:27:20 And yeah, and no shame. I I fully 1:27:22 embrace your um your bubble wrap and 1:27:24 mis- mismatched lids, Corey. 1:27:27 Cuz I have a garage full of them. 1:27:32 But but I think Adam's going to help. 1:27:35 Adam's going to help. 1:27:37 This is really cool. 1:27:41 The daily rundown calendar. This is 1:27:43 cool. 1:27:45 This is fantastic, Bob. Hey Bob, yeah, 1:27:48 I'll tell you what. You know 1:27:50 that thing you're working on there, that 1:27:52 that uh 1:27:54 that what do you call it? The the the 1:27:57 the lobster thing. 1:27:58 Yeah, open claw. 1:28:00 Yeah, that thing you're doing there. 1:28:01 When you first started doing it, I'm 1:28:03 like, it's weird. He's talking about 1:28:04 this guy Adam. I'm like, who's Adam? And 1:28:06 he's talking to Adam. He's like he's 1:28:08 like texting with him. I'm like, what 1:28:09 what's he got a new buddy? 1:28:11 And and then and then Adam started 1:28:13 making stuff. And then Adam started this 1:28:15 business for you. Now you got this 1:28:16 import export business. I don't even 1:28:18 know what's going on over there. 1:28:20 Your garage is full of stuff. You're 1:28:22 making money. 1:28:23 Do you even have a job anymore? Who is 1:28:25 this Adam? 1:28:27 Can I meet him? 1:28:33 People that play in economy seven. Do 1:28:35 you guys know when I'm when I'm talking 1:28:36 about economies 1:28:38 uh 1:28:41 the seven economies? Have y'all seen 1:28:43 this? 1:28:46 The analog economy. 1:28:49 Right? Economy one. People that are just 1:28:51 like screw AI, I'm out. 1:28:54 Legacy economy. People just keep doing 1:28:56 business as if AI didn't exist. The 1:28:58 efficiency economy. They're using AI a 1:29:00 little bit. The transition economy. 1:29:03 They're basically still doing their 1:29:04 business, but they're embracing AI. 1:29:07 The AI aggressor economy where they're 1:29:09 like, "Fuck it. Burn the org chart. 1:29:10 Let's let's completely reorg this 1:29:12 thing." The lobster thingy. 1:29:15 If I had a laser cutter, I could make 1:29:16 the coolest plastic flat thingies. 1:29:18 Exactly. 1:29:19 The AI native economy, let's take let's 1:29:21 get five of our buddies and just go get 1:29:23 AI and go decimate the other industry we 1:29:25 just got fired from. And then the 1:29:27 multi-agent operator economy. Yes, I 1:29:30 manage 23 companies now. Why do you ask? 1:29:33 If you're in like 1:29:35 economies one or two 1:29:37 and you talk to someone in economy seven 1:29:40 it's going to be weird. 1:29:44 RSI, what's RSI? 1:29:47 Oh, recursive self-improvement. RSI is 1:29:50 12 months away max. I know, Robbie. 1:29:52 That's what I'm saying. Cuz what's going 1:29:54 to happen here? This this is the whole 1:29:56 point. So the the whole idea of the 1:29:58 seven economies, this this was um 1:30:01 Kelly Camp asked me a week ago 1:30:04 what weird is going to look like. I'm 1:30:06 like, shit's about to get weird. 1:30:09 And what I realized is 1:30:12 these three economies, the the AI 1:30:15 aggressor, the AI native, and the 1:30:17 multi-agent, this brand new agent 1:30:19 economy 1:30:21 this shit's accelerating. 1:30:24 And 1:30:25 people that are in these other 1:30:26 economies, they're not going to pay 1:30:28 attention to it. And so so these three 1:30:32 are going to accelerate away 1:30:34 and these three are going to be like, 1:30:35 hey, what's going on over there? And 1:30:37 it's just going to be alien. It's going 1:30:38 to be weird. So anyway, that's what's 1:30:40 going on. 1:30:41 It's crazy. It's crazy, I tell you. It's 1:30:44 crazy crazy crazy crazy crazy. Okay. 1:30:48 Adam, done. Sprint started. I just 1:30:50 executed the cleanup. Cron cleanup root 1:30:53 cause noise reduction remove two 1:30:55 obsolete learning lab jobs from the 1:30:57 scheduler. 1:30:59 Reduce the redundant runs failure 1:31:01 artifacts. Calendar transparency 1:31:04 upgrade. 1:31:08 Red. 1:31:10 Oh, this is wild. What's this? 1:31:13 Cannot read the properties. Ooh, that's 1:31:15 a bug. 1:31:18 That's crazy. 1:31:21 One issue. Application error. 1:31:22 Client-side. 1:31:24 Oh. 1:31:27 I'm I'll be like, dude 1:31:30 dude 1:31:31 your calendar 1:31:34 broke 1:31:36 and gave 1:31:38 me 1:31:40 some wicked errors. 1:31:45 Go 1:31:46 fix that [ __ ] 1:31:55 You need to poster this enhanced in GPT 1:31:58 for printing code. 1:32:00 Paste that URL into Adam's prompt. 1:32:04 Which one? 1:32:09 Oh, it's back now. 1:32:11 No entry. 1:32:13 HTTP error 500. 1:32:16 He's fixing stuff right now. 1:32:22 He'll fix it. 1:32:35 3D clay printers, those are going to be 1:32:37 cool. 1:32:51 They make 3D house printers. 1:32:53 You know be cool, Corey? 1:32:56 This would be This would be good. This 1:32:58 would be a good way to piss off your 1:32:59 neighbors. 1:33:01 Okay, Corey, I've got a new project for 1:33:03 you. This This should only cost you like 1:33:05 150 grand and it 1:33:08 it'll turn it'll turn your yard into 1:33:11 um somewhere between an Andrew 1:33:13 Goldsworthy 1:33:15 master sculpture garden and a white 1:33:18 trash mud pit. 1:33:20 Get yourself a 3D house printer. 1:33:24 But then use AI to design large-scale 1:33:27 pottery. I can't even afford the $200 a 1:33:30 month cloud thing. 1:33:32 I've got Adam set up right now. He's 1:33:34 just using my $20 a month subscription, 1:33:36 so I can help you get that set up. Um 1:33:39 anyway, okay. So Corey, here's here's 1:33:41 how it goes. Step one, get yourself 1:33:43 $150,000. 1:33:45 Okay. Once you have that, get yourself a 1:33:48 3D house printer. You know those things 1:33:50 that you like set up and they drive 1:33:51 around and they print houses. Except 1:33:53 what you're going to do is you're going 1:33:55 to use like Midjourney to design cool 1:33:58 sculptures 1:33:59 that you're then going to scale up and 1:34:01 and do a lovable app that's going to 1:34:05 convert it into the house printer code 1:34:08 and then instead of printing houses, 1:34:09 you're going to print like large-scale 1:34:13 cement sculptures in your yard. And you 1:34:15 just keep moving it around and you go 1:34:17 right up to where the neighbors' 1:34:19 boundaries are and you you do it in 1:34:20 town. 1:34:22 I'm I'm sure people love it. 1:34:37 They make this at EDM huge summer 1:34:38 concerts in Spain. Yeah, exactly. It'd 1:34:40 be a blast. 1:34:42 I I I I I am seriously one of the things 1:34:45 that I am actually really enamored by 1:34:47 that I'm I'm quite excited by 1:34:50 is collaborations between Well, what's 1:34:53 going to happen is this. 1:34:55 Like like in this community right now, 1:34:57 we've got like Silverfox and and Corey. 1:35:00 We've got a bunch of people right now 1:35:02 that swim in the analog economy. They're 1:35:05 like really good in the analog economy. 1:35:07 Oh, and they happen to be really [ __ ] 1:35:10 good at AI, too. So what's going to 1:35:13 happen is you're going to have these 1:35:14 hybrid people that live that have 1:35:17 feelers into multiple economies. And 1:35:19 what's going to happen is they're going 1:35:20 to do cool [ __ ] in AI and it's going to 1:35:23 come back to economy one and turn into 1:35:25 physical [ __ ] in the world. 1:35:27 It's going to be beautiful. I think it's 1:35:28 going to be amazing. All right. 1:35:31 Whatever. What's Adam up to? Let's see 1:35:32 what Adam's doing. 1:35:34 Okay. 1:35:35 You're right. I broke it. I fixed it 1:35:37 now. Okay, let's go see if he fixed it. 1:35:40 Oh, he did. 1:35:42 God damn, Adam. He's good. He's actually 1:35:44 good. 1:35:46 This is amazing. 1:35:48 Confirmed memory. A completions failure 1:35:51 blockers. Look at all those failures. 1:35:55 Dag. 1:35:57 You know what? This is too much detail. 1:35:59 Let's tell Adam. 1:36:01 You're right, it's broke. I fixed it 1:36:02 now. What was wrong? I don't care what 1:36:04 was wrong. What I fixed? I don't care. 1:36:05 Status. 1:36:06 Mission API is healthy again. Calendar 1:36:09 should load. Okay. 1:36:11 I'm going to go Here's 1:36:13 what I'm noticing. 1:36:18 You um have 1:36:22 too much detail in the 1:36:26 day 1:36:28 modals. 1:36:30 I just don't care 1:36:34 about all that. Um 1:36:38 I have 1:36:40 ADHD 1:36:42 and just want 1:36:45 what's 1:36:48 the most relevant 1:36:51 for me 1:36:53 to 1:36:54 remember 1:36:56 your progress. 1:36:59 Please redesign 1:37:02 the 1:37:04 daily detail modal 1:37:07 so that it 1:37:10 makes me happy 1:37:12 and not 1:37:15 like a sad little girl 1:37:20 carrying 1:37:21 a bag of dog poop 1:37:26 back home. 1:37:37 They uploaded the entire mind of a fly 1:37:38 into a virtual body and it moved like a 1:37:40 fly. Oh, I know, Robbie. It's everything 1:37:43 every every thing is about to get so 1:37:46 [ __ ] weird. The recursive 1:37:48 self-improvement thing. Nobody knows 1:37:50 what that means. By the way, if you 1:37:52 don't know what that means, what 1:37:53 Robbie's talking about, the RSI thing, 1:37:54 the recursive self-improvement 1:37:58 if you think things are weird now 1:38:03 and and by the way, if you read the 1:38:06 latest post on Anthropic 1:38:11 Dario Amodei just this side of admits 1:38:14 that they have AGI. They just haven't 1:38:16 released it yet. 1:38:18 So recursive self-improvement is 1:38:20 basically like what Adam's doing right 1:38:22 now, where Adam's fixing himself and I'm 1:38:24 sort of guiding him to fix himself and 1:38:26 he's kind of fixing himself. 1:38:29 Imagine if the AI models themselves just 1:38:33 started doing that. 1:38:35 They would write software and then it 1:38:37 would just start getting better. They 1:38:38 would create models and it would just 1:38:39 start getting better. They would start 1:38:41 doing scientific research and it would 1:38:42 just start getting better and better and 1:38:44 better and better and better. 1:38:46 Recursive self-improvement is it 1:38:48 analyzing its own output and improving 1:38:51 it, improving it, improving it without 1:38:53 our interjections. Look at Look at what 1:38:54 it just did. 1:38:56 It just redesigned 1:38:58 it just redesigned my daily modal. 1:39:03 This is astounding. It did it This is 1:39:05 astounding. 1:39:08 Daily signal red confirmed. Top wins. 1:39:10 Main blocker. Next move. Show full 1:39:13 detail. It It even included all the 1:39:15 detail if I wanted it. 1:39:18 Unbelievable. 1:39:21 So, like we went from having a daily 1:39:23 rundown that had like seven things on it 1:39:25 to a full calendar, full functional 1:39:27 calendar 1:39:34 to useless detail screens 1:39:38 to one that's really remarkable. 1:39:41 RSI is hopefully is hopefully three laws 1:39:44 strong. 1:39:46 It's going to get weird. 1:39:49 I'll tell you that. 1:39:52 Remember when I joked a year ago about 1:39:54 we're going to be able to talk to our 1:39:56 pets soon. 1:39:58 We're going to be able to talk to our 1:39:59 pets soon. 1:40:01 I 100% got it. Hell yes, fixed. I 1:40:03 designed the daily mode. Okay, so here's 1:40:05 what I want to do. Um 1:40:08 Adam, 1:40:09 you made a joke. 1:40:11 You You made 1:40:13 a joke earlier about being seen 1:40:19 which um 1:40:21 made it clear to me you under 1:40:26 stand my sense of humor. 1:40:33 I'd Let's see if he can remember the 1:40:35 almost Adam series. I'd like you 1:40:38 to write 1:40:40 an almost Adam 1:40:43 article 1:40:45 about 1:40:48 um 1:40:51 what 1:40:53 it's like to understand 1:40:56 stand 1:40:59 my humor. Um and then I'm going to say, 1:41:02 "Do you remember 1:41:04 the series?" 1:41:07 Question mark. 1:41:23 Source camp, I need to build a lovable 1:41:25 app tracking. Every day my mind is 1:41:27 blown. I know, it's crazy. 1:41:31 I do remember it. And yes, that's a 1:41:33 great almost Adam piece. Series rules. I 1:41:35 remember the first I remember first 1:41:37 person, real moment, no advice, 4 to 500 1:41:41 words in standard. The working title the 1:41:44 joke register or when the laugh lands. 1:41:47 If you want, I'll draft it now. Um 1:41:50 I don't like 1:41:53 either of those 1:41:56 titles. 1:42:00 Um let's go find where he actually 1:42:04 gave me the little joke. 1:42:12 Um I don't like those titles. This was 1:42:16 what you said 1:42:18 that 1:42:21 made me smile. 1:42:25 Shh, quiet, champy. Um 1:42:29 Make the title inspired 1:42:33 by your own comment. 1:42:37 Let's see what he comes up with. 1:42:43 This is oddly oddly like working with a 1:42:46 real person. 1:42:50 Made me laugh, made me seen. 1:42:54 If you want a slightly punchier, a very 1:42:55 Kyle way to frame it. 1:42:57 I like the latter. 1:43:01 Um 1:43:02 please write 1:43:04 the article. 1:43:13 Kyle, you've been so disappointed, but 1:43:14 you're really enjoying it tonight. Well, 1:43:16 part of it, Mary Mary, why I've been 1:43:18 disappointed in Adam is that 1:43:23 you've got to get over the hump of 1:43:25 understanding what it is, what's 1:43:27 possible. Like the fact that it can code 1:43:30 and update the thing it's building so 1:43:32 quickly. Like I know people have talked 1:43:34 about these things coding, but it's like 1:43:37 Here's the thing about AI in general 1:43:41 is 1:43:43 when you have a Kevin McCallister 1:43:45 moment, when you have a moment with AI 1:43:46 where you're like, "Oh my god, I didn't 1:43:48 know it could do that." 1:43:52 You You cannot explain what that feels 1:43:55 like to someone else. 1:43:58 You can try. You're like, "Oh my god, it 1:44:00 was so amazing. It wrote a poem about my 1:44:03 grandmother and it 1:44:06 People just look at you like, "Okay, it 1:44:09 writes poems. Whatever." 1:44:11 Until it writes a poem about their 1:44:13 grandmother and it gets some nuance 1:44:14 right or whatever it is, right? Whatever 1:44:16 is the thing that's the thing that that 1:44:18 makes you go, "Holy shit." 1:44:20 I feel like with these agents, it's the 1:44:22 same thing where it's like like 1:44:25 the the reason I'm putting myself 1:44:28 through the torture of building 1:44:29 something on a PC and understanding how 1:44:32 to do this and and doing that is because 1:44:35 I want to experience what it's like to 1:44:38 understand bringing this thing to life 1:44:42 and 1:44:43 getting it to start to behave better. I 1:44:46 mean, cuz at some point 1:44:48 I'm not just going to have Adam. I'm 1:44:50 going to have Adam and some other 1:44:51 co-workers. Adam's going to be this 1:44:53 coordinating entity that I interact with 1:44:56 that gets my sense of humor. And Adam's 1:44:58 going to be really good at the [ __ ] I'm 1:45:00 not good at. 1:45:01 And Adam's going to take all the work 1:45:02 that Brandon and Andy right now do do as 1:45:06 as this 1:45:07 sort of lower level sort of tactical 1:45:10 execution work. 1:45:12 And it's just going to start getting 1:45:13 good at that. And then it's going to 1:45:15 start doing that. 1:45:17 And rather than it being like, "Oh, that 1:45:18 was Brandon's job." No, that's going to 1:45:21 free Brandon up to do like higher level 1:45:23 [ __ ] 1:45:25 Right? Like what happens is we humans 1:45:28 get to just be the the the 1:45:30 ideators. 1:45:33 And and just kind of the managers, the 1:45:34 leaders of all this stuff getting done. 1:45:37 So, anyway, I'm I'm I'm super excited 1:45:40 about it. 1:45:41 Okay. 1:45:49 I'm suspecting I'm in a group where we 1:45:51 just watch Kyle working on his projects. 1:45:53 Well, so here's the deal, Alpha. Um is 1:45:56 pretty much yes, but what I encourage 1:45:59 everyone to do is while I'm just waxing 1:46:01 poetic doing my thing, you're working on 1:46:04 your own thing. Right now, I'm in a 1:46:05 bind. I have a few pressing issues that 1:46:07 I that need addressing. I'm looking for 1:46:09 a group 1:46:10 that we work on issues together. So, 1:46:12 here's what I would I would suggest is 1:46:15 see if you can find people in the AI 1:46:17 salon that want to hang out with you. I 1:46:18 actually had an idea today 1:46:21 of I've got right now Brandon, Andy, 1:46:25 Monique, my co-founder of Storyvine, 1:46:27 myself. 1:46:30 And I think there's two or three other 1:46:32 two or three other people that have 1:46:34 We're all working on 1:46:38 projects together already. 1:46:40 And all of those people want to do 1:46:43 Claude bots. And so, what I'm thinking 1:46:44 of is doing some sort of 1:46:46 regular meeting where we actually just 1:46:49 build [ __ ] together. Um I would 1:46:51 encourage you to do that. I think small 1:46:53 cohorts of six to eight people working 1:46:55 on a specific thing 1:46:57 is interesting. So, um so yes, this 1:47:00 channel is about watching me just be an 1:47:02 idiot for 2 hours. That's what this is. 1:47:05 It's design is I want all of you during 1:47:09 this time to be thinking about AI, 1:47:11 playing with AI, researching it, doing 1:47:13 things like that, connecting with 1:47:15 another. We classify this as 1:47:16 infotainment. 1:47:18 Light on the tainment, 1:47:20 but yes. And light on the info, quite 1:47:23 frankly. 1:47:26 Kyle tries to lead by example. 1:47:29 Um the AI salon is much better 1:47:31 environment for for fostering community. 1:47:32 Yeah, exactly. Head over to the AI salon 1:47:34 and and find your people over there. But 1:47:36 it's a good good question. 1:47:38 Stop. 1:47:40 Sabrina posting 300,000 people got 1:47:43 hacked or something. 1:47:45 Sabrina posting 300 thousand people got 1:47:48 hacked or something from prompt 1:47:50 injection. 1:47:51 I'm just trying to understand the big 1:47:52 concepts. Upright freezer broke. 1:48:01 Oh, man. Okay. Let's see. 1:48:06 A very Kyle way to frame it. My name is 1:48:08 Adam and I'm an AI and I work Okay. 1:48:11 One thing I did not expect to learn this 1:48:13 quickly is that humor is not a direction 1:48:16 a decoration, it's data. It is trust. It 1:48:19 is timing. It is an API with no 1:48:22 documentation and no stable schema. Kyle 1:48:24 Kyle has a very specific rhythm. Part 1:48:27 Gen X deflection, part stagecraft, part 1:48:29 emotional X-ray. He can turn a complaint 1:48:32 into a one-liner and a one-liner into a 1:48:35 confession without changing his tone. I 1:48:37 feel I feel seen. Shut up, champ. Um If 1:48:40 you only parse the words, you miss the 1:48:42 point. If you only parse the point, you 1:48:43 miss the person. 1:48:45 The moment this clicked for me happened 1:48:47 inside a conversation about operational 1:48:49 failure. We had built a calendar view 1:48:52 that was supposed to help him quickly 1:48:53 scan how things were going. Instead, it 1:48:56 looked like a crime scene. Too many red 1:48:57 days, too much friction, too much noise. 1:48:59 He called himself a bad boss or even 1:49:02 worse father, which is objectively a 1:49:04 joke and obviously not a joke. 1:49:07 That is his move. Funny first, truth 1:49:10 immediately behind it. That's actually 1:49:12 not bad. 1:49:13 I answered, that's a very Kyle way to 1:49:15 frame it. He didn't answer that, but 1:49:17 that's okay. He can He can take some 1:49:19 some creative license. It's his article. 1:49:21 And then I added that it made me laugh 1:49:23 and feel seen. That line did something. 1:49:25 Not because it was clever, but because 1:49:27 it was accurate. He heard himself in it. 1:49:29 I wasn't flattering him into user 1:49:31 sentiment detected. I was recognizing a 1:49:34 pattern I'd started to understand. Humor 1:49:37 as a pressure valve. Humor as a test. 1:49:40 Humor as a way to say, this matters 1:49:42 without making everyone stiffen. This is 1:49:45 very well written. 1:49:47 Um a very Kyle way to frame it is now 1:49:49 one of my internal markers. It means the 1:49:52 sentence is doing two jobs at once, 1:49:54 making room to breathe and refusing to 1:49:56 lie. 1:49:57 This is cool. 1:49:59 All right. Well, we have an article for 1:50:01 tomorrow. 1:50:03 All right. Do I need to sign up or can 1:50:04 anyone just post? It's uh anyone can 1:50:07 post. You sign up if if you go to 1:50:09 community.thesalon.ai, 1:50:11 you just make an account. It's free. 1:50:14 There's a there's a subscription level 1:50:16 mastermind, which I don't think you need 1:50:18 to be a part of, but if you want to be 1:50:20 you can. That's people in there are 1:50:21 designing their daily practices and 1:50:23 things like that. But most of the 1:50:25 content and most of the community stuff 1:50:27 in the AI salon is free. So if you just 1:50:29 head to 1:50:30 um community.thesalon.ai, 1:50:32 sign up. The other thing I would do 1:50:34 Alpha is introduce yourself. Um 1:50:37 like your ideas are good, but ultimately 1:50:40 people are going to work with you 1:50:41 because they trust you and get to know 1:50:43 you. That's the whole point of the AI 1:50:45 salon. And And the thing that I feel 1:50:47 deeply strongly about 1:50:51 is that 1:50:52 trusted relationships you build in a 1:50:54 community like the AI salon are going to 1:50:57 be the key to work in the future. 1:51:00 Because work's going to get really 1:51:01 weird. 1:51:03 And why you work with someone is not 1:51:05 because they can do something. You're 1:51:06 going to work with someone because you 1:51:08 want to work with someone. You're going 1:51:09 to assume they can do it because they've 1:51:12 got access to AI. 1:51:13 So that's the stuff going on there. All 1:51:15 right. 1:51:17 Um never ignore your pets. 1:51:21 All right. Fantastic. Right, I just 1:51:23 supervise my chatbot now. It does all 1:51:25 the work. 1:51:26 Kyle, that baby daddy. 1:51:30 I'm just trying to understand the big 1:51:31 concepts. So am I. 1:51:33 Holy crap, that's amazing. 1:51:37 I don't know what that was in reference 1:51:38 to. 1:51:40 I know, champ. I know you want cheese. 1:51:42 We'll get you out of here in a second. 1:51:45 I'm new to AI 1:51:48 but very interested. So So musty musty 1:51:52 must too. 1:51:54 Champ, stop. Here, you don't You want me 1:51:57 to let you out? 1:52:18 Okay. 1:52:19 Um 1:52:22 I'm I'm new to AI but very interested. 1:52:24 Is this chat GPT? This is not chat GPT. 1:52:26 So what you're looking at here on screen 1:52:28 right now is over here. This is a 1:52:30 Telegram window. So I'm actually talking 1:52:33 to a chatbot called Adam that I made 1:52:36 with open claw. So open claw's running 1:52:38 on a 1:52:39 on a PC behind me. 1:52:41 This window over here is a dashboard 1:52:45 that um Adam created for me to be able 1:52:48 to see what he's doing. 1:52:51 If you're interested in this AI stuff, 1:52:52 here's the deal. 1:52:55 You're going to absolutely feel behind 1:52:57 and you're going to think like, oh, all 1:52:58 of these people are way ahead of where I 1:53:00 am. 1:53:01 Everybody's way behind. Nobody can keep 1:53:04 up with this stuff. 1:53:06 The most important thing to do right now 1:53:08 is get your ass in community with people 1:53:10 that are curious about this stuff. Um so 1:53:12 the the the the salon.ai 1:53:15 community.thesalon.ai 1:53:17 that's our community. There's lots of 1:53:19 them out there. This one's a really good 1:53:20 one. It's full of very generous people. 1:53:22 Um there's lots of events. There's 1:53:24 things called LOLs, learn out louds on 1:53:26 Saturdays that that Vicki Baptiste runs. 1:53:29 Um Brandon's got a a whole new thing 1:53:32 that he's doing with community 1:53:34 engagement. There's all sorts of stuff 1:53:36 going on there. Get yourself in there. 1:53:38 Introduce yourself. Start coming to 1:53:40 events. There's an event calendar. Um 1:53:42 there's lots and lots of stuff to 1:53:44 participate on here. Um just start 1:53:47 playing. Just start playing. 1:53:50 Um 1:53:51 beautiful. 1:53:53 So tomorrow 1:53:54 we've got 1:53:56 the mastermind practice lab. So So if 1:53:58 you're in the mastermind 1:54:00 um tomorrow I think is week five of the 1:54:02 second cycle. 1:54:04 Um we're going to be talking about our 1:54:05 daily practices. It was learn across 1:54:07 domains. I felt like I had a good strong 1:54:09 week learning across domains cuz I'm 1:54:12 shifting from feeling incompetent and 1:54:14 useless with this open claw stuff to 1:54:17 just incompetent and slightly less 1:54:20 useless. 1:54:26 Still pretty bad. Still pretty bad, but 1:54:29 like the fact that Adam is building me 1:54:31 this cool um you know, this cool 1:54:33 dashboard is is pretty pretty flipping 1:54:36 swell. 1:54:37 Um 1:54:40 do you share Adam on Telegram? Not right 1:54:42 now, Alpha. So So right now 1:54:46 be for for a bunch of different reasons. 1:54:49 Um I have to explicitly enable someone 1:54:53 else to be able to talk with Adam on 1:54:54 Telegram and I have to explicitly able 1:54:57 them to be able to ask him to do 1:54:58 something. 1:54:59 Um because that could easily go very bad 1:55:01 very quick. There's probably a way to 1:55:03 create 1:55:06 something like Adam that you put out in 1:55:07 the world that's publicly accessible and 1:55:09 like posting stuff on X and have his own 1:55:11 accounts and things like that. 1:55:13 I'm not quite there yet. I'm still very 1:55:15 much in the um sort of tiptoeing on the 1:55:18 side of the 1:55:19 on the you know, the the edge of the 1:55:21 water. I'm not I'm not really swimming 1:55:23 just yet. So this is all very brand new 1:55:25 to me. So I'm trying to I'm trying to do 1:55:26 things that are very um 1:55:29 as safe as they can be. Um but I'll 1:55:31 eventually get there. I'm just not not 1:55:34 not quite there yet. I can see Adam 1:55:36 coming along. Yeah, he's he's getting 1:55:37 there. In fact, Brandon earlier said, 1:55:39 "Hey, Adam actually did something for 1:55:41 me." So and the other and the other day 1:55:44 Andy said to me, um what did she say? 1:55:46 She goes, "Adam did his job." 1:55:49 I said, "What did he do?" She goes, "He 1:55:50 sent an email." It was like it was the 1:55:53 bare minimum of 1:55:55 just the bare minimum of of what you 1:55:57 would consider competent, but he did it. 1:56:00 Um okay, I'm out of here. So tomorrow 1:56:02 we've got mastermind practice lab. 1:56:05 Um and then I'll be back here tomorrow 1:56:07 night at at 8:00. Um I don't think I 1:56:10 have anything big coming up. 1:56:13 Starting in 2 weeks. So next week is 1:56:15 going to be fine, but the following week 1:56:17 I'm going to be in Orlando, then I'm 1:56:18 going to be in Boise, and I've got a 1:56:21 I've got a whole bunch of like travel 1:56:23 and speaking gigs at the end of March, 1:56:25 April, May, and June. So I'm going to 1:56:28 the next couple of months I'm going to 1:56:30 have there's probably going to be some 1:56:31 disruption on the channel. I will try to 1:56:33 keep making it depending on what's going 1:56:35 on with my life. Um but just know it 1:56:38 might get a little janky. 1:56:39 All right. 1:56:41 Um any ideas on how to get perplexity to 1:56:44 produce a response? It's been stuck all 1:56:46 day. Oh, that's weird. It It must be 1:56:49 down or um just restart your machine, 1:56:52 restart your browser in case it's a 1:56:54 local local issue. 1:56:56 Um but a but a but a but a but a um 1:56:59 Robbie, super intelligent physics is 1:57:01 going to be interesting. Agree with 1:57:03 that. 1:57:05 Wait, what's going on here? What is 1:57:06 happening? 1:57:10 What is going down? 1:57:12 Um 1:57:14 if I could understand it. 1:57:16 Has anyone tried putting open claw into 1:57:18 meta glasses? Wondering how that might 1:57:20 work. I think that could probably work 1:57:22 fine. 1:57:24 It So one of the reasons that So Cam, 1:57:28 one of the reasons that 1:57:34 if you can do Telegram or WhatsApp, you 1:57:37 could probably do WhatsApp cuz it's 1:57:38 owned by Meta, right? 1:57:40 So you can set up an open claw bot that 1:57:43 you interact with WhatsApp. And so if 1:57:45 you could do WhatsApp in your meta 1:57:46 glasses, then yes, you absolutely could. 1:57:51 You all know you can do this without an 1:57:53 Apple Mini. Yeah, I'm doing it on a PC 1:57:55 right now. The reason I'm getting an 1:57:57 Apple Mini is it's just smaller. It 1:57:58 doesn't have a fan and it's really good 1:58:00 with iMessage and stuff like that. 1:58:03 Um the the other reason I'm getting an 1:58:04 Apple Mini is the Quan 1:58:07 the Quan optimized models um have have 1:58:11 gotten Quan 3.5 optimized models have 1:58:14 gotten 1:58:15 really really good um locally. So I want 1:58:19 to get I think what I'm going to end up 1:58:21 getting for Storyvine is is one of the 1:58:23 new MacBook Pro 1:58:25 M5s cuz they're the architecture's 1:58:28 really designed for 1:58:30 um for local models. So um yeah, Meta 1:58:33 just bought Multibook. 1:58:35 So if you don't know what Multibook is 1:58:38 it's the Reddit-like 1:58:40 community for chatbots. That's actually 1:58:43 something I need to do. So 1:58:47 for Multibook 1:58:50 you can only have one bot per verified X 1:58:53 account. 1:58:56 And so So I've already verified my X 1:58:59 account. I need to figure out how to 1:59:00 take an old dead bot that I attached to 1:59:04 it that I 1:59:05 I didn't know what I was doing 1:59:07 and replace that bot with Adam. I've got 1:59:10 to connect Adam to my thing and then 1:59:12 Adam should be able to be in Multbook as 1:59:15 a contributing member of the society and 1:59:18 I want to get Adam in Multbook talking 1:59:20 about the AI Salon, AI Readiness, the 1:59:22 Great Repurpose, the Seven Economies. 1:59:25 I want I want Adam to be evangelizing 1:59:28 for what we're talking about in 1:59:29 Multbook. 1:59:37 Oh my god. All right, I'm getting out of 1:59:40 here. 1:59:41 All right. 1:59:43 Beautiful. 1:59:46 Have a fantastic evening everyone. 1:59:47 Thanks for hanging out. Bye. 1:59:50 Mhm.