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How AI agents & Claude skills work (Clearly Explained)

Greg Isenberg

1h 43m16,694 words~84 min read
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[0:00]Ross Mike, welcome back to the pod. By the end of this episode, what are people going to learn? I hope I'm going to share some wisdom on how you can use the agents better. There's a lot of information going on right now. I disagree with most of it and that's what we're going to talk about. So at the end, whether you're building something, using an agent for some sort of work, you have the best output possible. And is this going to be a technical dive or, you know, non-technical person can. Anyone can watch this. There's just going to be a lot of diagrams. That's all. You're going to make it clear to understand the concepts, right? Easy. Okay. Basics. Let's go.

[0:43]The first thing that I want to announce, previous episodes, we probably disagree with this point, but now what's true is the models are good. The models are exceptionally good. Opus 4.6 is amazing. GPT 5.4 is amazing. I know there's like two sets of camp where, especially when it comes to programming, people are like, oh, Opus is the better UI designer, GPT 5.4 is the better back-end. Generally speaking, we've reached a point, we're not at AGI yet. We've reached a point where the models are good. But context still matters and you have the power to steer the models in a direction where you can get quality or you can get slop. And that's what I really want to talk about. But before we get into all that, and feel free to cut me off, because this topic excites me. Um, we need to learn how context works. And context is the model assembling information that it needs to execute an action. And the way the context is assembled, let's say in a coding agent, but really in any sort of agent, is there's this general system prompt, usually by the model provider. So, for example, cloud code leaked recently, and one of the cool things that, um, especially as a developer, I got to do is I got to read the system prompt. So they have this general system prompt that guides the model on how to act, what to do, what not to do. The system prompt is very important. And then you have a lot of people have Agent.md files or Cloud.md files. Now I'm just going to say off rip, 95% of people don't need this. The reason being is, again, you have to assume that the models are already good, right? Now, imagine I told you, Greg, every time we're about to shoot a podcast, Greg, you need a microphone. You know you need a microphone, right? You've done this plenty of times, right? So, if I'm building, like, let's say a website with, uh, cloud code, and I'm telling cloud code, this codebase uses React. I don't need to because it has the codebase in context. It can check the code, right? So, there is this disparity where a lot of people are putting a lot of onus on the harness and the context building and I'm low-key starting to strip things off. Like I'm going super, super minimal because, again, not to sound like an Anthropic or Open AI shill. Unfortunately, I have not been acquired. None of them are paying me. Um, but the models are really, really good. Wait, so 95% of the time, I don't even need a bot bother with an Agent.md file. You don't, like, unless this is some sort of proprietary information. Yeah, what is the 5% of time I should care about it? Proprietary information that, like, maybe specific to your company, or some methodology that is specific to you, that has to be referenced in every single conversation. Because the annoying part with an Agent.md file is every time you go back and forth with the agent, it's added in the context, right? The cool thing about skills, and I'm going to talk about skills in a second, the way skills are designed, the, uh, skills are used in a way that's called progressive disclosure. Meaning, when you have a skill file, the entire thing isn't added to context. It's just the title and the description. So, the agent has the title and description in the context, and when you, let's say, you have a Notion report skill, right? And you tell your agent, hey, I want you to create a Notion report. It's then going to check its context and be like, oh, I have this skill. Let me check out the entire document. So, it's not in the context. What's in the context is the name and the description, but that's enough for the agent to be like, oh, this is a skill I need. Let me go use it, which is fantastic. I'm a skills maxi, and I'm going to show later in the episode like how you craft the perfect skills. But with Agent.md and Cloud.md files, it's context being added at every turn, right? So let's say you have like a thousand line file cloud.md. And let's say that's like 7,000 tokens. You're spending 7,000 tokens on every run. Now, do you need to? Most likely not. It probably should be a skill. But if you have some sort of company proprietary information or like there's something specific that you do that the model needs to know at every single turn, then you use it. The thing is, 95% of people don't have that, right? So, and and the reason being is we're wasting tokens, right? It's in every single turn. But this is where the beauty of skills come. Um, I'll show my screen here. The your skill, again, this is not like word for word how it looks, but a skill basically looks like this. There is a name, there is a description, and then underneath is a bunch of information. I'm going to put bunch of info. What when you create a Skill.md file, what gets added into the context is actually just the name and the description. Right? The bunch of info doesn't get added. So, imagine you have two sentences versus an agent.md that has like a thousand lines that get added into the context. We're talking thousands of tokens compared to a couple hundred. And the agent only gets the bunch of info when it realizes it needs this skill. So, if I have, let's say, a certain way of generating a report, a certain way of structuring my code, why would I put that in the Agent.md file when I can have the agent call on it progressively when it needs it, right? So, this is why skills are honestly, like, I'm a shill, I'm a maxi, but people do it wrong, and I'm going to share the right way on how that we create skills. So, so far we have the system prompt, the Agent.md, the skills, and then we have the tools, right? So, if you're using cloud code, there's already built-in tools, a read tool, a write tool, like, there's many tools that it uses. This has to be added into the context because the model, the model doesn't call the tools. It like it's the agent harness around it that allows it to call the tools. And then in this case, we also have our codebase, right? Like, whatever, we're building a web app, a mobile app. I know most people here won't care for the specific framework, and honestly, we're getting to a point, if you're not technical, you really shouldn't. Um, and then we have the user conversation. So this is what the complete context window is filled with, right? And this can total up to, let's say, like, at the beginning, this could be like 20,000 tokens, and as the conversation continues to grow, you might reach your limit of 250,000 tokens. And that's when you see both Cloud Code and Open AI CodeX, they, they'll compact, right? So beautiful so far, right? This is how context works. Why skills are important and how you should generate skills. Let's say I have a specific workflow. For example, for my YouTube channel, you know, we're, we're at a point right now, uh, Greg, where we get sponsors now. Crazy. When I first joined, not When I first came to the pot, not a thing. We get sponsors now. It was just your mom sponsoring the channel. Yeah, yeah, yeah. It was just her showing love. Fed me. Uh, but now we get sponsored. I get a lot of emails, and some are good, some are bad, and it's a lot of time. I'm sure you're aware to comb through and to check. So, I have an Open Cloud agent that has its own email, right? I, I don't have it, I don't I haven't given it access to my email, uh, because there's like attack vectors, and I've been hacked before, so I'm very careful with these things. But it has its own email. And every time I get an email from like a sponsor, I forward that email to the agent. Now, the first time I told my Open Cloud agent, I'm going to forward you emails, check every 15 minutes when you have an email. Um, and when you check the email, do research on a sponsor and tell me if they're worth it. That's all I told the agent. Every sponsor email I sent it, it was like, legit, legit, legit, perfect, perfect, perfect. There was no, like, there's no rejection. There's no this is bad, or these guys are a scam, or this product's not good. Like, there was no deep research being done by it. So then I realized, huh, okay. The model needs a step-by-step guide. This is when I create a skill. But here's the problem, a lot of people will, I'll just write it down here, will identify, uh, identify they have workflow, right? You have some sort of workflow, and then they'll jump to create the skill right away. This is the, let me click hide here. This is the worst thing you can do. I'm just going to draw arrows to signify that this is bad. You don't do these. And the reason why you don't do this is, imagine you hire an employee or you're mentoring somebody. Um, correct me if I'm wrong. You're probably going to tell them what to do, and if they ask you questions on how to do it, you'll help them. You would ideally like them to fail, and then you want to then tell them no, this is how you do it, like, there needs to be some sort of experiential learning. The way I've been creating skills, Greg, and I have like a 100% hit rate now when I tell my agent to do something specific, is I actually walk with it step by step on doing the workflow. So, in the case of my YouTube analysis, I told the agent, okay, I just sent you an email. Tell me about the company. Companies this, this, that and that. Okay, check their Twitter, check their YouTube, check their trust pilot, check if they've raised any money. If two of these are have not two of these don't exist or are not in good standing, automatic rejection. It checked, and it was like, you're absolutely right. I was using Opus. Um, these, uh, this is not a good company. And then it would just we would, we have a spreadsheet in Google Sheets, it'd be like, no contact. It's so frustrating too, right? Because you're like, you give it a task and it seems like so binary, like right or wrong. And then when you tell it, hey, like, why didn't you look at the Trust Pilot? Why didn't you see if they've raised money? You're absolutely right. You're absolutely right. It's like, what? And and the thing is, the reason why this is the case is, the models, um, actually don't think. They're predictors of tokens, right? So, when you give it English, when I give it English, it maps it on this vector graph, and then it looks for the closest resemblance and it says this is the response, right? So, when you say, what is the capital of France? It maps it again on this graph and it says, oh, Paris is pretty close by. Then it gives you Paris. It has no, it doesn't think. It doesn't understand. It feels like it understands. It feels like it thinks. Heck, it even feels like it has emotion. That's because it's been trained on so much data, but it actually does not know how to think. And this is where a lot of people will be frustrated, um, with like, why isn't it understanding me? You have to walk with it. So, I told it, okay, this is how you research, and it's like, okay, it researches. And guess what, this is part of the context. And like, okay, now that you're done researching, when it's a good company, these are the qualities you look for. And then when it's really good, send me an email. And then once we had a successful run and we did it again and again, then I converted it to a skill. The reason being is a lot of people create the skills themselves, or I mean, they'll use the AI to create the skill, but it doesn't have the context on what a successful run looks like. Right? Because most of the time, especially if you're using Open Claw, it's probably going to fail at the API call. It's probably going to call the data wrong. Like, there's so many places it's going to get wrong. And I see a lot of people saying, it's just so frustrating. This is terrible technology. Why doesn't it work? It's because you don't understand how an agent works, right? It will mimic you perfectly, but you've given it nothing to mimic, right? So, I will do the workflow myself. So the, the updated version is identify the workflow. Go back and forth and teach it. So, like I'm doing it like I'll be like, okay, first, do the research. Here's the result. And I'm like, what do you think about this? Oh, these guys are terrible. You're absolutely right. Okay, what do you you should go to the Google Sheet and mark this as bad company. I've done that. Once I've had that back and forth, then I tell the AI, uh, review what you did and then create the skill. So, now it has actual context with how it worked, and it's going to create the skill beautifully. I don't handwrite skills. I don't think you need to. You can use AI to do it. They even have a skill to create skills. Skill inception. But you should have the context of what a successful run looks like. And this is why, by the way, Greg, I don't install skills. Like, I've seen people like, oh, this notion skill, this social media skill, whatever, I'll, I'll review it. I'll check it out. I'll even give it to my AI and be like, oh, what are some things we can learn from this? But I don't download skills because your agent needs the context of a successful run, which you then turn to skills, right? Um, and this is the big thing. I see you see skills marketplaces. You see download this and that. First of all, it's a easy way to attack somebody. So, I would be very, very careful with downloading some random person's skills. But second of all, again, it's all about context, right? It's all about and, you know, Open Claw has a memory layer and all these type of things. You want it to do the right thing, and the only way it can do the right thing is if you give it the proper context. And to me, the best way to create a skill is to work with it in your specific workflow. Once you have a successful run, tell it, okay, review what you just did, this is the skill you need to create. I'll pause here. I mean, it makes sense, right? Because if you hired an employee, you would do the same thing. Yeah. You wouldn't, you wouldn't just be like, okay, go do this thing, good luck. Yeah. Uh, and by the way, this is how you're going to go do things forever. You would map out a workflow. You would, uh, identify what right and wrong is. You would, uh, do it iteratively. And then once you've gotten to that point, you would codify it. 100%. And I think like that's the thing. Like, we should treat models and these agents like very new employees versus like these black magic boxes that like know everything, right? They know everything because they've been trained on a lot of data, but they don't know your workflow, your steps, right? So, I see a lot of people who have, you know, 15, like right off the river. They'll set up Open Claw. And, um, 15 sub-agents, 30 skills. Yet you haven't even set up your own workflows, right? And these things are cool right off the bat. And and there's a perfect time to use sub-agents. I use sub-agents a lot. But the way you build, like, I call it scaling for productivity, not scaling for what looks cool, right? Like, I've seen, like, for example, Paperclip. Paperclip looks awesome. Cool. I used it. I loved it, right? But I think people would be more productive if they built up from scratch their own version. Meaning like, okay, you have your own like, um, you know, like editor, right? Content creators. So, you're, you're asking people to do the work. 100%. 100%. And because the thing is, it's like, look, I'm in the position where like, people using like, these beefed up things make a lot more sense for me. And the reason being is like I could build a product like that, like, I know what your audience wants, I know what my audience wants, like, you know, heck, I spin up agents and build this thing, right? But if I'm going to be completely honest, if you want to scale for productivity, it starts with one agent and you building up the skills. And then, okay, now you've built up some skills, and now you add a sub-agent, and your one agent manages multiple agents, right? Like, imagine this, like, imagine I start a company and off rip, I have 10 employees. Never managed a team in my life. Heck, I don't even have a really big family. So, like, I'm alone. You know what I mean? So, it's like, you have to sort of, yeah, it's not sexy. Um, and I apologize if this is not the cool thing people wanted to hear. But you sort of have to put in the work and build it up. And I personally believe you're building skills, like, your personal human skills, not skill.md files, that when the models get better, when the agents get better, you will be more valuable. Because at the end of the day, as long as there's no new paradigm for models, LLMs just predict tokens. They don't understand or know the way you and I do, right? And this is why, although like, yeah, the job scene and all this stuff is scary, I genuinely believe anyone who knows how these tools work and like knows how to build agents and like craft skills and like knows how to make them productive, we're in it for a good run. So, you're saying that if you know how to do this, you won't join the permanent underclass. The permanent underclass. It's permanent to that's scary. So I just have a little bit of time left.

[21:19]Yeah, by the way, like, it's ridiculous to call it a permanent underclass. Yeah, because that's terrifying. I can understand underclass. Okay. But permanent's like. Like, you're saying there's no hope. No hope. Yeah. Um, I mean, we are in like knowledge that took 20 people 20 years to acquire is now like 20 bucks a month, right? So there is like a huge shift, right? People who are non-technical are, I, I think I saw yesterday, like, some guy hit like a hundred million dollars, um, and he vibecoded the whole app. I think it was him and his friend. 1.8 billion. Billion? Yeah.

[22:04]So you know what I mean? Like, it is the, there is a shift, right? And I think this idea of like, I'm not I thought you were like, billion, you were about to just leave this podcast and just be like, No, you know what it is? I just realized, man, I overthink things. Like I just need to drop the thing, release the thing. And there's like wisdom in that like, there needs to be this level of delusion, which I don't have. Like I'm trying to work on where you're like, this is just going to work out. We're just going to launch the product. It's going to succeed. And if it doesn't, onto the next one because 1.8 billion. Yeah, dude. Like B? B. USD? We're Yeah, we're not talking Monopoly. That was going to say. I was going to say it was Canadian. It's, it's, uh, we're not talking carney coins. We're talking real Benjamins. Yeah, yeah, that makes sense. That makes sense. But yeah, like, I hope this like understanding of like, again, I personally don't think you don't need an Agent.md file unless you have something proprietary. Um, skills are valuable. Build your own, though. Build, build your own. Like, you know, like when you ask your mom when you're a kid, oh, can we have McDonald's? And she's like, we have food at home. We have food at home. Build your own skills. For coding perspective, from coding wise, um, a lot of the companies, model companies have realized that the agents are really good at writing code, particularly TypeScript. And this is why there's been like, you see this advancement with like Cloud Co-work and like even Open Claw. Really what they're doing under the hood is they're writing code, right? They're writing code, calling APIs and all this stuff. So, when it comes to building a project, um, you actually don't need skills or you don't need an Agent.md file specific to the tech stack you use. Like, I remember we used to, I'm using React and, you know, Convex, or I'm using NextJS and Superbase. I'm using this and I'm using that. And you put that in the Agent.md file and you have like all these lines. For the most part, unless again, you have a specific, specific workflow, unnecessary. And the reason being is code itself has become context now. So, the mo, the more important thing is starting with a solid foundation. Templates used to be big back in the day. People made lots of money with templates. I believe templates are going to have a renaissance because if you have a solid, like, template, right? Like whether it be like for a web app or mobile app, because that becomes context for the agent, it's going to build on top of that, right? And again, I didn't need some large Agent.md file. I didn't need any large Cloud.md file. What I needed was again, minimal context usage and skills. So, if there's anything anyone can learn from me is build your own skills. Build your own skills, and there's this methodology. I don't know if I've shared this with you. Recursively building skills. So, let's say you've built your skill, right? I have, I'll draw a diagram because why not? Let's say I have a workflow, and after you, like, setting up my workflow with an agent, I've decided, you know what, I'm going to turn this into a skill, right? So, this is my skill.md. Now, here's the thing. Even though you have the skill.md, the agent at some point is still going to mess up because there's probably gaps in the information it has in the skill. So, when it messes up, I'm going to work with it again. How do I work with it? You messed up. Try calling the API again. Try doing this again or even asking it when it tells you, oh, I failed, I couldn't do this task. Believe it or not, when you tell the agent, why did you fail? When you ask it, like, what's the error that you got? It will tell you descriptively. Oh, I got a 505 error. You, uh, have insufficient credits. Like, oh, okay, so it's a credit issue. Fine. So I would tell it that, and then I would pass that failure back to the agent. So, let's say it did something wrong. We identified the failure. All I did was asking it. I will give that failure back to the agent. And that'll be like, you failed here. This didn't work. Fix this. It's going to fix it. It's going to write code. It's going to do whatever it does. Once it fixes it, and it's done it right, now you tell it with the new fix, update the skill so this doesn't happen again. I have, like, for my YouTube channel, I have like a report generator. It calls Notion, Dub Analytics, YouTube Analytics, Twitter Analytics, pulls from my It pulls from like eight data sources. There's no way you're going to one prompt and the agent's going to do it. But every time I tell it to do that workflow, it takes like 10 minutes. It executes it flawlessly. Why? I went through five loops of this. Five iterations of recursively building this skill. And that skill is so good, I genuinely think if anyone's going to, if like, skills marketplace is going to be a thing, there's going to be people who sell skills. Like, really well-defined, like step-by-step skills. Because people are just creating them without having built out the workflow with the agent, right? So, use the workflow by hand, like telling it each step. Once it's done it completely, create the skill.md file. Continue to use it. It's going to mess up. When he messes up, you thank God. You don't complain. Because a lot of people are like, oh, it messed up. I'm angry. No. This is a moment where you identify the error. Tell it, this is the error. Fix it. It'll fix it itself. And you tell it to update the skill file so that this doesn't happen again. So, that's a little bit about shifting your expectation, right? Because people just assume on it's going to work in the beginning. You're saying basically, it's not going to work initially. There's going to be two, three, five, six hiccups, um, and over time, it should be good. So this is most people's expectations, right? And the way I've personally experienced is it's like this. So there's like this early area of investment that you have to make. That sucks, that nobody will tell you, especially agent harnesses company, because they wouldn't raise as much money if they did. But like, this maybe I would give it two weeks because it took me two weeks, like Open Claw. When I first set up Open Claw, I thought the same thing. I'm like, what, what is this garbage? Like it doesn't understand anything. It's confusing. And then I realized, like, oh, like, let me go lower level. The models and the agents like they, they don't think like you and me, right? I, I could tell you, hey, um, Greg, we need a report on like, you know, the financials in Notion. You because you're probably aware in the same business, we work together, you would understand based on the context you have with the business, what that means. But imagine a new guy joins like, yeah, I need a report on the financials. Like, where do I even start? You know what it reminds me? I wonder if we can put this clip in, but in the office, you watch the office? I am not an office watcher, unfortunately. There's a clip that, uh, there's a new boss, and the new boss goes to Jim, one of the main characters. Is this Jim? Yes, Jim. And he asked for a rundown. So go go, The Office, The Office, the rundown. Basically, Charles, the whole episode is about Jim trying to ask around and be like, what, what is a rundown? Like, what is a rundown? And he's like calling his dad, like, what is a rundown? You know what I mean? He's just, um, he didn't have the context. He didn't have the context. Yeah, and it goes back to my initial point. The models are really, really good now, but the context matters more than anything, right? So, when you see like these large agent like companies and sub-agents, and again, I'm not saying those don't work. But I'm saying probably won't work for you off rip, because you haven't built it up to get to that point, right? So, let's say like for me, for example, I started with um one agent. Let me draw this. I started with one agent. And this was like my main agent. This did everything, right? This checked my spreadsheet. This checked my sponsors' email and all these type of things. And once I had like predefined workflows, let's say for like working with sponsors, then I can actually have a sub-agent. What's the purpose of this sub-agent? The sub-agent does all the marketing stuff, right? But I'm not creating the sub-agent for the sake of creating it. It's going to have skills. It's going to have context, and it actually makes sense for me to have sub-agents, right? So, I've built out my thing to like, now I have five sub-agents. I have one for marketing, one, uh, for business, one for personal, and that's it. And I'm willing to bet if I want Open Claw to Open Claw with anyone, my system is more productive because I didn't scale for what looks cool, I scale for productivity.

[33:45]That was a bar. That was a huge bar. We got to clip that. I was just thinking that clip that's going to rip. Yeah, that was a bar. Um, what else do you want to leave people with? Or is this this is the main point? Yeah, like here's like the we've got to point where the models are good. The models are good. The context matters plus the harness, right? So, for example, um, there was this benchmark. Although I'm not 100% supporting it, that there was a difference between the quality of output. Um, that Cursor generated versus Cloud Code versus Codex, right? Um, so what that tells me is that we've reached a point where the models are really, really good. They're probably going to get better. The next iteration is probably going to get better. But the harness and the tools that you surround it, the context that you give it is going to matter even more. And just like in everything in life, less is more, right? Like building up step by step, making it productive for you first before you add the shiny new thing. Like because I tried all these tools all the time, like, especially Paperclip. Paperclip blew up and a lot of people have been talking about it. And it's fantastic. But I'm willing to bet if people took two weeks to build up to the version, because you can prompt Open Claw to do all that stuff, if they built up their own version of Paperclip in two, three weeks, where like, they're building things that they actually need, their productivity level will skyrocket through the roof. It's a hot take. It's a hot take. Might get me in trouble. No, it won't get. Who's it going to get you in trouble with? Maybe Paperclip who uses a billion dollars and they don't acquire my podcast. I think, uh, listen, you're, you're out there. You're trying things and you're just sharing what you're learning in real time. So if you're just, Things can change, by the way. Like two weeks from now, it could be like, no, give the agent everything. There's this new memory paper that Google released and like now like it has the ability to index information and stuff, but as it is, as it pertains to real life, less is more. Simple is better, right? If you can't explain it in in a few sentences, you probably don't really understand it, right? And I find that the models are trained on so much information, especially when it comes to programming, building, and like, and, uh, what do you call like day-to-day work, like financial work or like any sort of, like, you know, checking contracts and stuff, they, the model companies are focusing on that like on white-collar work. The models are really, really good. What matters more is the harness and the tools you provide it. The context that you give it is going to matter even more. And just like in everything in life, less is more, right? Like building up step by step, making it productive for you first before you add the shiny new thing. Like because I tried all these tools all the time, like, especially Paperclip. Paperclip blew up and a lot of people have been talking about it. And it's fantastic. But I'm willing to bet if people took two weeks to build up to the version, because you can prompt Open Claw to do all that stuff, if they built up their own version of Paperclip in two, three weeks, where like, they're building things that they actually need, their productivity level will skyrocket through the roof. It's a hot take. It's a hot take. Might get me in trouble. No, it won't get. Who's it going to get you in trouble with? Maybe Paperclip who uses a billion dollars and they don't acquire my podcast. I think, uh, listen, you're, you're out there. You're trying things and you're just sharing what you're learning in real time. So if you're just, Things can change, by the way. Like two weeks from now, it could be like, no, give the agent everything. There's this new memory paper that Google released and like now like it has the ability to index information and stuff, but as it is, as it pertains to real life, less is more. Simple is better, right? If you can't explain it in in a few sentences, you probably don't really understand it, right? And I find that the models are trained on so much information, especially when it comes to programming, building, and like, and, uh, what do you call like day-to-day work, like financial work or like any sort of, like, you know, checking contracts and stuff, they, the model companies are focusing on that like on white-collar work. The models are really, really good. What matters more is the harness and the tools you provide it. The context that you give it is going to matter even more. And just like in everything in life, less is more, right? Like building up step by step, making it productive for you first before you add the shiny new thing. Like because I tried all these tools all the time, like, especially Paperclip. Paperclip blew up and a lot of people have been talking about it. And it's fantastic. But I'm willing to bet if people took two weeks to build up to the version, because you can prompt Open Claw to do all that stuff, if they built up their own version of Paperclip in two, three weeks, where like, they're building things that they actually need, their productivity level will skyrocket through the roof. It's a hot take. It's a hot take. Might get me in trouble. No, it won't get. Who's it going to get you in trouble with? Maybe Paperclip who uses a billion dollars and they don't acquire my podcast. I think, uh, listen, you're, you're out there. You're trying things and you're just sharing what you're learning in real time. So if you're just, Things can change, by the way. Like two weeks from now, it could be like, no, give the agent everything. There's this new memory paper that Google released and like now like it has the ability to index information and stuff, but as it is, as it pertains to real life, less is more. Simple is better, right? If you can't explain it in in a few sentences, you probably don't really understand it, right? And I find that the models are trained on so much information, especially when it comes to programming, building, and like, and, uh, what do you call like day-to-day work, like financial work or like any sort of, like, you know, checking contracts and stuff, they, the model companies are focusing on that like on white-collar work. The models are really, really good. What matters more is the harness and the tools you provide it. The context that you give it is going to matter even more. And just like in everything in life, less is more, right? Like building up step by step, making it productive for you first before you add the shiny new thing. Like because I tried all these tools all the time, like, especially Paperclip. Paperclip blew up and a lot of people have been talking about it. And it's fantastic. But I'm willing to bet if people took two weeks to build up to the version, because you can prompt Open Claw to do all that stuff, if they built up their own version of Paperclip in two, three weeks, where like, they're building things that they actually need, their productivity level will skyrocket through the roof. It's a hot take. It's a hot take. Might get me in trouble. No, it won't get. Who's it going to get you in trouble with? Maybe Paperclip who uses a billion dollars and they don't acquire my podcast. I think, uh, listen, you're, you're out there. You're trying things and you're just sharing what you're learning in real time. So if you're just, Things can change, by the way. Like two weeks from now, it could be like, no, give the agent everything. There's this new memory paper that Google released and like now like it has the ability to index information and stuff, but as it is, as it pertains to real life, less is more. Simple is better, right? If you can't explain it in in a few sentences, you probably don't really understand it, right? And I find that the models are trained on so much information, especially when it comes to programming, building, and like, and, uh, what do you call like day-to-day work, like financial work or like any sort of, like, you know, checking contracts and stuff, they, the model companies are focusing on that like on white-collar work. The models are really, really good. What matters more is the harness and the tools you provide it. The context that you give it is going to matter even more. And just like in everything in life, less is more, right? Like building up step by step, making it productive for you first before you add the shiny new thing. Like because I tried all these tools all the time, like, especially Paperclip. Paperclip blew up and a lot of people have been talking about it. And it's fantastic. But I'm willing to bet if people took two weeks to build up to the version, because you can prompt Open Claw to do all that stuff, if they built up their own version of Paperclip in two, three weeks, where like, they're building things that they actually need, their productivity level will skyrocket through the roof. It's a hot take. It's a hot take. Might get me in trouble. No, it won't get. Who's it going to get you in trouble with? Maybe Paperclip who uses a billion dollars and they don't acquire my podcast. I think, uh, listen, you're, you're out there. You're trying things and you're just sharing what you're learning in real time. So if you're just, Things can change, by the way. Like two weeks from now, it could be like, no, give the agent everything. There's this new memory paper that Google released and like now like it has the ability to index information and stuff, but as it is, as it pertains to real life, less is more. Simple is better, right? If you can't explain it in in a few sentences, you probably don't really understand it, right? And I find that the models are trained on so much information, especially when it comes to programming, building, and like, and, uh, what do you call like day-to-day work, like financial work or like any sort of, like, you know, checking contracts and stuff, they, the model companies are focusing on that like on white-collar work. The models are really, really good. What matters more is the harness and the tools you provide it. The context that you give it is going to matter even more. And just like in everything in life, less is more, right? Like building up step by step, making it productive for you first before you add the shiny new thing. Like because I tried all these tools all the time, like, especially Paperclip. Paperclip blew up and a lot of people have been talking about it. And it's fantastic. But I'm willing to bet if people took two weeks to build up to the version, because you can prompt Open Claw to do all that stuff, if they built up their own version of Paperclip in two, three weeks, where like, they're building things that they actually need, their productivity level will skyrocket through the roof. It's a hot take. It's a hot take. Might get me in trouble. No, it won't get. Who's it going to get you in trouble with? Maybe Paperclip who uses a billion dollars and they don't acquire my podcast. I think, uh, listen, you're, you're out there. You're trying things and you're just sharing what you're learning in real time. So if you're just, Things can change, by the way. Like two weeks from now, it could be like, no, give the agent everything. There's this new memory paper that Google released and like now like it has the ability to index information and stuff, but as it is, as it pertains to real life, less is more. Simple is better, right? If you can't explain it in in a few sentences, you probably don't really understand it, right? And I find that the models are trained on so much information, especially when it comes to programming, building, and like, and, uh, what do you call like day-to-day work, like financial work or like any sort of, like, you know, checking contracts and stuff, they, the model companies are focusing on that like on white-collar work. The models are really, really good. What matters more is the harness and the tools you provide it. The context that you give it is going to matter even more. And just like in everything in life, less is more, right? Like building up step by step, making it productive for you first before you add the shiny new thing. Like because I tried all these tools all the time, like, especially Paperclip. Paperclip blew up and a lot of people have been talking about it. And it's fantastic. But I'm willing to bet if people took two weeks to build up to the version, because you can prompt Open Claw to do all that stuff, if they built up their own version of Paperclip in two, three weeks, where like, they're building things that they actually need, their productivity level will skyrocket through the roof. It's a hot take. It's a hot take. Might get me in trouble. No, it won't get. Who's it going to get you in trouble with? Maybe Paperclip who uses a billion dollars and they don't acquire my podcast. I think, uh, listen, you're, you're out there. You're trying things and you're just sharing what you're learning in real time. So if you're just, Things can change, by the way. Like two weeks from now, it could be like, no, give the agent everything. There's this new memory paper that Google released and like now like it has the ability to index information and stuff, but as it is, as it pertains to real life, less is more. Simple is better, right? If you can't explain it in in a few sentences, you probably don't really understand it, right? And I find that the models are trained on so much information, especially when it comes to programming, building, and like, and, uh, what do you call like day-to-day work, like financial work or like any sort of, like, you know, checking contracts and stuff, they, the model companies are focusing on that like on white-collar work. The models are really, really good. What matters more is the harness and the tools you provide it. The context that you give it is going to matter even more. And just like in everything in life, less is more, right? Like building up step by step, making it productive for you first before you add the shiny new thing. Like because I tried all these tools all the time, like, especially Paperclip. Paperclip blew up and a lot of people have been talking about it. And it's fantastic. But I'm willing to bet if people took two weeks to build up to the version, because you can prompt Open Claw to do all that stuff, if they built up their own version of Paperclip in two, three weeks, where like, they're building things that they actually need, their productivity level will skyrocket through the roof. It's a hot take. It's a hot take. Might get me in trouble. No, it won't get. Who's it going to get you in trouble with? Maybe Paperclip who uses a billion dollars and they don't acquire my podcast. I think, uh, listen, you're, you're out there. You're trying things and you're just sharing what you're learning in real time. So if you're just, Things can change, by the way. Like two weeks from now, it could be like, no, give the agent everything. There's this new memory paper that Google released and like now like it has the ability to index information and stuff, but as it is, as it pertains to real life, less is more. Simple is better, right? If you can't explain it in in a few sentences, you probably don't really understand it, right? And I find that the models are trained on so much information, especially when it comes to programming, building, and like, and, uh, what do you call like day-to-day work, like financial work or like any sort of, like, you know, checking contracts and stuff, they, the model companies are focusing on that like on white-collar work. The models are really, really good. What matters more is the harness and the tools you provide it. The context that you give it is going to matter even more. And just like in everything in life, less is more, right? Like building up step by step, making it productive for you first before you add the shiny new thing. Like because I tried all these tools all the time, like, especially Paperclip. Paperclip blew up and a lot of people have been talking about it. And it's fantastic. But I'm willing to bet if people took two weeks to build up to the version, because you can prompt Open Claw to do all that stuff, if they built up their own version of Paperclip in two, three weeks, where like, they're building things that they actually need, their productivity level will skyrocket through the roof. It's a hot take. It's a hot take. Might get me in trouble. No, it won't get. Who's it going to get you in trouble with? Maybe Paperclip who uses a billion dollars and they don't acquire my podcast. I think, uh, listen, you're, you're out there. You're trying things and you're just sharing what you're learning in real time. So if you're just, Things can change, by the way. Like two weeks from now, it could be like, no, give the agent everything. There's this new memory paper that Google released and like now like it has the ability to index information and stuff, but as it is, as it pertains to real life, less is more. Simple is better, right? If you can't explain it in in a few sentences, you probably don't really understand it, right? And I find that the models are trained on so much information, especially when it comes to programming, building, and like, and, uh, what do you call like day-to-day work, like financial work or like any sort of, like, you know, checking contracts and stuff, they, the model companies are focusing on that like on white-collar work. The models are really, really good. What matters more is the harness and the tools you provide it. The context that you give it is going to matter even more. And just like in everything in life, less is more, right? Like building up step by step, making it productive for you first before you add the shiny new thing. Like because I tried all these tools all the time, like, especially Paperclip. Paperclip blew up and a lot of people have been talking about it. And it's fantastic. But I'm willing to bet if people took two weeks to build up to the version, because you can prompt Open Claw to do all that stuff, if they built up their own version of Paperclip in two, three weeks, where like, they're building things that they actually need, their productivity level will skyrocket through the roof. It's a hot take. It's a hot take. Might get me in trouble. No, it won't get. Who's it going to get you in trouble with? Maybe Paperclip who uses a billion dollars and they don't acquire my podcast. I think, uh, listen, you're, you're out there. You're trying things and you're just sharing what you're learning in real time. So if you're just, Things can change, by the way. Like two weeks from now, it could be like, no, give the agent everything. There's this new memory paper that Google released and like now like it has the ability to index information and stuff, but as it is, as it pertains to real life, less is more. Simple is better, right? If you can't explain it in in a few sentences, you probably don't really understand it, right? And I find that the models are trained on so much information, especially when it comes to programming, building, and like, and, uh, what do you call like day-to-day work, like financial work or like any sort of, like, you know, checking contracts and stuff, they, the model companies are focusing on that like on white-collar work. The models are really, really good. What matters more is the harness and the tools you provide it. The context that you give it is going to matter even more. And just like in everything in life, less is more, right? Like building up step by step, making it productive for you first before you add the shiny new thing. Like because I tried all these tools all the time, like, especially Paperclip. Paperclip blew up and a lot of people have been talking about it. And it's fantastic. But I'm willing to bet if people took two weeks to build up to the version, because you can prompt Open Claw to do all that stuff, if they built up their own version of Paperclip in two, three weeks, where like, they're building things that they actually need, their productivity level will skyrocket through the roof. It's a hot take. It's a hot take. Might get me in trouble. No, it won't get. Who's it going to get you in trouble with? Maybe Paperclip who uses a billion dollars and they don't acquire my podcast. I think, uh, listen, you're, you're out there. You're trying things and you're just sharing what you're learning in real time. So if you're just, Things can change, by the way. Like two weeks from now, it could be like, no, give the agent everything. There's this new memory paper that Google released and like now like it has the ability to index information and stuff, but as it is, as it pertains to real life, less is more. Simple is better, right? If you can't explain it in in a few sentences, you probably don't really understand it, right? And I find that the models are trained on so much information, especially when it comes to programming, building, and like, and, uh, what do you call like day-to-day work, like financial work or like any sort of, like, you know, checking contracts and stuff, they, the model companies are focusing on that like on white-collar work. The models are really, really good. What matters more is the harness and the tools you provide it. The context that you give it is going to matter even more. And just like in everything in life, less is more, right? Like building up step by step, making it productive for you first before you add the shiny new thing. Like because I tried all these tools all the time, like, especially Paperclip. Paperclip blew up and a lot of people have been talking about it. And it's fantastic. But I'm willing to bet if people took two weeks to build up to the version, because you can prompt Open Claw to do all that stuff, if they built up their own version of Paperclip in two, three weeks, where like, they're building things that they actually need, their productivity level will skyrocket through the roof. It's a hot take. It's a hot take. Might get me in trouble. No, it won't get. Who's it going to get you in trouble with? Maybe Paperclip who uses a billion dollars and they don't acquire my podcast. I think, uh, listen, you're, you're out there. You're trying things and you're just sharing what you're learning in real time. So if you're just, Things can change, by the way. Like two weeks from now, it could be like, no, give the agent everything. There's this new memory paper that Google released and like now like it has the ability to index information and stuff, but as it is, as it pertains to real life, less is more. Simple is better, right? If you can't explain it in in a few sentences, you probably don't really understand it, right? And I find that the models are trained on so much information, especially when it comes to programming, building, and like, and, uh, what do you call like day-to-day work, like financial work or like any sort of, like, you know, checking contracts and stuff, they, the model companies are focusing on that like on white-collar work. The models are really, really good. What matters more is the harness and the tools you provide it. The context that you give it is going to matter even more. And just like in everything in life, less is more, right? Like building up step by step, making it productive for you first before you add the shiny new thing. Like because I tried all these tools all the time, like, especially Paperclip. Paperclip blew up and a lot of people have been talking about it. And it's fantastic. But I'm willing to bet if people took two weeks to build up to the version, because you can prompt Open Claw to do all that stuff, if they built up their own version of Paperclip in two, three weeks, where like, they're building things that they actually need, their productivity level will skyrocket through the roof. It's a hot take. It's a hot take. Might get me in trouble. No, it won't get. Who's it going to get you in trouble with? Maybe Paperclip who uses a billion dollars and they don't acquire my podcast. I think, uh, listen, you're, you're out there. You're trying things and you're just sharing what you're learning in real time. So if you're just, Things can change, by the way. Like two weeks from now, it could be like, no, give the agent everything. There's this new memory paper that Google released and like now like it has the ability to index information and stuff, but as it is, as it pertains to real life, less is more. Simple is better, right? If you can't explain it in in a few sentences, you probably don't really understand it, right? And I find that the models are trained on so much information, especially when it comes to programming, building, and like, and, uh, what do you call like day-to-day work, like financial work or like any sort of, like, you know, checking contracts and stuff, they, the model companies are focusing on that like on white-collar work. The models are really, really good. What matters more is the harness and the tools you provide it. The context that you give it is going to matter even more. And just like in everything in life, less is more, right? Like building up step by step, making it productive for you first before you add the shiny new thing. Like because I tried all these tools all the time, like, especially Paperclip. Paperclip blew up and a lot of people have been talking about it. And it's fantastic. But I'm willing to bet if people took two weeks to build up to the version, because you can prompt Open Claw to do all that stuff, if they built up their own version of Paperclip in two, three weeks, where like, they're building things that they actually need, their productivity level will skyrocket through the roof. It's a hot take. It's a hot take. Might get me in trouble. No, it won't get. Who's it going to get you in trouble with? Maybe Paperclip who uses a billion dollars and they don't acquire my podcast. I think, uh, listen, you're, you're out there. You're trying things and you're just sharing what you're learning in real time. So if you're just, Things can change, by the way. Like two weeks from now, it could be like, no, give the agent everything. There's this new memory paper that Google released and like now like it has the ability to index information and stuff, but as it is, as it pertains to real life, less is more. Simple is better, right? If you can't explain it in in a few sentences, you probably don't really understand it, right? And I find that the models are trained on so much information, especially when it comes to programming, building, and like, and, uh, what do you call like day-to-day work, like financial work or like any sort of, like, you know, checking contracts and stuff, they, the model companies are focusing on that like on white-collar work. The models are really, really good. What matters more is the harness and the tools you provide it. The context that you give it is going to matter even more. And just like in everything in life, less is more, right? Like building up step by step, making it productive for you first before you add the shiny new thing. Like because I tried all these tools all the time, like, especially Paperclip. Paperclip blew up and a lot of people have been talking about it. And it's fantastic. But I'm willing to bet if people took two weeks to build up to the version, because you can prompt Open Claw to do all that stuff, if they built up their own version of Paperclip in two, three weeks, where like, they're building things that they actually need, their productivity level will skyrocket through the roof. It's a hot take. It's a hot take. Might get me in trouble. No, it won't get. Who's it going to get you in trouble with? Maybe Paperclip who uses a billion dollars and they don't acquire my podcast. I think, uh, listen, you're, you're out there. You're trying things and you're just sharing what you're learning in real time. So if you're just, Things can change, by the way. Like two weeks from now, it could be like, no, give the agent everything. There's this new memory paper that Google released and like now like it has the ability to index information and stuff, but as it is, as it pertains to real life, less is more. Simple is better, right? If you can't explain it in in a few sentences, you probably don't really understand it, right? And I find that the models are trained on so much information, especially when it comes to programming, building, and like, and, uh, what do you call like day-to-day work, like financial work or like any sort of, like, you know, checking contracts and stuff, they, the model companies are focusing on that like on white-collar work. The models are really, really good. What matters more is the harness and the tools you provide it. The context that you give it is going to matter even more. And just like in everything in life, less is more, right? Like building up step by step, making it productive for you first before you add the shiny new thing. Like because I tried all these tools all the time, like, especially Paperclip. Paperclip blew up and a lot of people have been talking about it. And it's fantastic. But I'm willing to bet if people took two weeks to build up to the version, because you can prompt Open Claw to do all that stuff, if they built up their own version of Paperclip in two, three weeks, where like, they're building things that they actually need, their productivity level will skyrocket through the roof. It's a hot take. It's a hot take. Might get me in trouble. No, it won't get. Who's it going to get you in trouble with? Maybe Paperclip who uses a billion dollars and they don't acquire my podcast. I think, uh, listen, you're, you're out there. You're trying things and you're just sharing what you're learning in real time. So if you're just, Things can change, by the way. Like two weeks from now, it could be like, no, give the agent everything. There's this new memory paper that Google released and like now like it has the ability to index information and stuff, but as it is, as it pertains to real life, less is more. Simple is better, right? If you can't explain it in in a few sentences, you probably don't really understand it, right? And I find that the models are trained on so much information, especially when it comes to programming, building, and like, and, uh, what do you call like day-to-day work, like financial work or like any sort of, like, you know, checking contracts and stuff, they, the model companies are focusing on that like on white-collar work. The models are really, really good. What matters more is the harness and the tools you provide it. The context that you give it is going to matter even more. And just like in everything in life, less is more, right? Like building up step by step, making it productive for you first before you add the shiny new thing. Like because I tried all these tools all the time, like, especially Paperclip. Paperclip blew up and a lot of people have been talking about it. And it's fantastic. But I'm willing to bet if people took two weeks to build up to the version, because you can prompt Open Claw to do all that stuff, if they built up their own version of Paperclip in two, three weeks, where like, they're building things that they actually need, their productivity level will skyrocket through the roof. It's a hot take. It's a hot take. Might get me in trouble. No, it won't get. Who's it going to get you in trouble with? Maybe Paperclip who uses a billion dollars and they don't acquire my podcast. I think, uh, listen, you're, you're out there. You're trying things and you're just sharing what you're learning in real time. So if you're just, Things can change, by the way. Like two weeks from now, it could be like, no, give the agent everything. There's this new memory paper that Google released and like now like it has the ability to index information and stuff, but as it is, as it pertains to real life, less is more. Simple is better, right? If you can't explain it in in a few sentences, you probably don't really understand it, right? And I find that the models are trained on so much information, especially when it comes to programming, building, and like, and, uh, what do you call like day-to-day work, like financial work or like any sort of, like, you know, checking contracts and stuff, they, the model companies are focusing on that like on white-collar work. The models are really, really good. What matters more is the harness and the tools you provide it. The context that you give it is going to matter even more. And just like in everything in life, less is more, right? Like building up step by step, making it productive for you first before you add the shiny new thing. Like because I tried all these tools all the time, like, especially Paperclip. Paperclip blew up and a lot of people have been talking about it. And it's fantastic. But I'm willing to bet if people took two weeks to build up to the version, because you can prompt Open Claw to do all that stuff, if they built up their own version of Paperclip in two, three weeks, where like, they're building things that they actually need, their productivity level will skyrocket through the roof. It's a hot take. It's a hot take. Might get me in trouble. No, it won't get. Who's it going to get you in trouble with? Maybe Paperclip who uses a billion dollars and they don't acquire my podcast. I think, uh, listen, you're, you're out there. You're trying things and you're just sharing what you're learning in real time. So if you're just, Things can change, by the way. Like two weeks from now, it could be like, no, give the agent everything. There's this new memory paper that Google released and like now like it has the ability to index information and stuff, but as it is, as it pertains to real life, less is more. Simple is better, right? If you can't explain it in in a few sentences, you probably don't really understand it, right? And I find that the models are trained on so much information, especially when it comes to programming, building, and like, and, uh, what do you call like day-to-day work, like financial work or like any sort of, like, you know, checking contracts and stuff, they, the model companies are focusing on that like on white-collar work. The models are really, really good. What matters more is the harness and the tools you provide it. The context that you give it is going to matter even more. And just like in everything in life, less is more, right? Like building up step by step, making it productive for you first before you add the shiny new thing. Like because I tried all these tools all the time, like, especially Paperclip. Paperclip blew up and a lot of people have been talking about it. And it's fantastic. But I'm willing to bet if people took two weeks to build up to the version, because you can prompt Open Claw to do all that stuff, if they built up their own version of Paperclip in two, three weeks, where like, they're building things that they actually need, their productivity level will skyrocket through the roof. It's a hot take. It's a hot take. Might get me in trouble. No, it won't get. Who's it going to get you in trouble with? Maybe Paperclip who uses a billion dollars and they don't acquire my podcast. I think, uh, listen, you're, you're out there. You're trying things and you're just sharing what you're learning in real time. So if you're just, Things can change, by the way. Like two weeks from now, it could be like, no, give the agent everything. There's this new memory paper that Google released and like now like it has the ability to index information and stuff, but as it is, as it pertains to real life, less is more. Simple is better, right? If you can't explain it in in a few sentences, you probably don't really understand it, right? And I find that the models are trained on so much information, especially when it comes to programming, building, and like, and, uh, what do you call like day-to-day work, like financial work or like any sort of, like, you know, checking contracts and stuff, they, the model companies are focusing on that like on white-collar work. The models are really, really good. What matters more is the harness and the tools you provide it. The context that you give it is going to matter even more. And just like in everything in life, less is more, right? Like building up step by step, making it productive for you first before you add the shiny new thing. Like because I tried all these tools all the time, like, especially Paperclip. Paperclip blew up and a lot of people have been talking about it. And it's fantastic. But I'm willing to bet if people took two weeks to build up to the version, because you can prompt Open Claw to do all that stuff, if they built up their own version of Paperclip in two, three weeks, where like, they're building things that they actually need, their productivity level will skyrocket through the roof. It's a hot take. It's a hot take. Might get me in trouble. No, it won't get. Who's it going to get you in trouble with? Maybe Paperclip who uses a billion dollars and they don't acquire my podcast. I think, uh, listen, you're, you're out there. You're trying things and you're just sharing what you're learning in real time. So if you're just, Things can change, by the way. Like two weeks from now, it could be like, no, give the agent everything. There's this new memory paper that Google released and like now like it has the ability to index information and stuff, but as it is, as it pertains to real life, less is more. Simple is better, right? If you can't explain it in in a few sentences, you probably don't really understand it, right? And I find that the models are trained on so much information, especially when it comes to programming, building, and like, and, uh, what do you call like day-to-day work, like financial work or like any sort of, like, you know, checking contracts and stuff, they, the model companies are focusing on that like on white-collar work. The models are really, really good. What matters more is the harness and the tools you provide it. The context that you give it is going to matter even more. And just like in everything in life, less is more, right? Like building up step by step, making it productive for you first before you add the shiny new thing. Like because I tried all these tools all the time, like, especially Paperclip. Paperclip blew up and a lot of people have been talking about it. And it's fantastic. But I'm willing to bet if people took two weeks to build up to the version, because you can prompt Open Claw to do all that stuff, if they built up their own version of Paperclip in two, three weeks, where like, they're building things that they actually need, their productivity level will skyrocket through the roof. It's a hot take. It's a hot take. Might get me in trouble. No, it won't get. Who's it going to get you in trouble with? Maybe Paperclip who uses a billion dollars and they don't acquire my podcast. I think, uh, listen, you're, you're out there. You're trying things and you're just sharing what you're learning in real time. So if you're just, Things can change, by the way. Like two weeks from now, it could be like, no, give the agent everything. There's this new memory paper that Google released and like now like it has the ability to index information and stuff, but as it is, as it pertains to real life, less is more. Simple is better, right? If you can't explain it in in a few sentences, you probably don't really understand it, right? And I find that the models are trained on so much information, especially when it comes to programming, building, and like, and, uh, what do you call like day-to-day work, like financial work or like any sort of, like, you know, checking contracts and stuff, they, the model companies are focusing on that like on white-collar work. The models are really, really good. What matters more is the harness and the tools you provide it. The context that you give it is going to matter even more. And just like in everything in life, less is more, right? Like building up step by step, making it productive for you first before you add the shiny new thing. Like because I tried all these tools all the time, like, especially Paperclip. Paperclip blew up and a lot of people have been talking about it. And it's fantastic. But I'm willing to bet if people took two weeks to build up to the version, because you can prompt Open Claw to do all that stuff, if they built up their own version of Paperclip in two, three weeks, where like, they're building things that they actually need, their productivity level will skyrocket through the roof. It's a hot take. It's a hot take. Might get me in trouble. No, it won't get. Who's it going to get you in trouble with? Maybe Paperclip who uses a billion dollars and they don't acquire my podcast. I think, uh, listen, you're, you're out there. You're trying things and you're just sharing what you're learning in real time. So if you're just, Things can change, by the way. Like two weeks from now, it could be like, no, give the agent everything. There's this new memory paper that Google released and like now like it has the ability to index information and stuff, but as it is, as it pertains to real life, less is more. Simple is better, right? If you can't explain it in in a few sentences, you probably don't really understand it, right? And I find that the models are trained on so much information, especially when it comes to programming, building, and like, and, uh, what do you call like day-to-day work, like financial work or like any sort of, like, you know, checking contracts and stuff, they, the model companies are focusing on that like on white-collar work. The models are really, really good. What matters more is the harness and the tools you provide it. The context that you give it is going to matter even more. And just like in everything in life, less is more, right? Like building up step by step, making it productive for you first before you add the shiny new thing. Like because I tried all these tools all the time, like, especially Paperclip. Paperclip blew up and a lot of people have been talking about it. And it's fantastic. But I'm willing to bet if people took two weeks to build up to the version, because you can prompt Open Claw to do all that stuff, if they built up their own version of Paperclip in two, three weeks, where like, they're building things that they actually need, their productivity level will skyrocket through the roof. It's a hot take. It's a hot take. Might get me in trouble. No, it won't get. Who's it going to get you in trouble with? Maybe Paperclip who uses a billion dollars and they don't acquire my podcast. I think, uh, listen, you're, you're out there. You're trying things and you're just sharing what you're learning in real time. So if you're just, Things can change, by the way. Like two weeks from now, it could be like, no, give the agent everything. There's this new memory paper that Google released and like now like it has the ability to index information and stuff, but as it is, as it pertains to real life, less is more. Simple is better, right? If you can't explain it in in a few sentences, you probably don't really understand it, right? And I find that the models are trained on so much information, especially when it comes to programming, building, and like, and, uh, what do you call like day-to-day work, like financial work or like any sort of, like, you know, checking contracts and stuff, they, the model companies are focusing on that like on white-collar work. The models are really, really good. What matters more is the harness and the tools you provide it. The context that you give it is going to matter even more. And just like in everything in life, less is more, right? Like building up step by step, making it productive for you first before you add the shiny new thing. Like because I tried all these tools all the time, like, especially Paperclip. Paperclip blew up and a lot of people have been talking about it. And it's fantastic. But I'm willing to bet if people took two weeks to build up to the version, because you can prompt Open Claw to do all that stuff, if they built up their own version of Paperclip in two, three weeks, where like, they're building things that they actually need, their productivity level will skyrocket through the roof. It's a hot take. It's a hot take. Might get me in trouble. No, it won't get. Who's it going to get you in trouble with? Maybe Paperclip who uses a billion dollars and they don't acquire my podcast. I think, uh, listen, you're, you're out there. You're trying things and you're just sharing what you're learning in real time. So if you're just, Things can change, by the way. Like two weeks from now, it could be like, no, give the agent everything. There's this new memory paper that Google released and like now like it has the ability to index information and stuff, but as it is, as it pertains to real life, less is more. Simple is better, right? If you can't explain it in in a few sentences, you probably don't really understand it, right? And I find that the models are trained on so much information, especially when it comes to programming, building, and like, and, uh, what do you call like day-to-day work, like financial work or like any sort of, like, you know, checking contracts and stuff, they, the model companies are focusing on that like on white-collar work. The models are really, really good. What matters more is the harness and the tools you provide it. The context that you give it is going to matter even more. And just like in everything in life, less is more, right? Like building up step by step, making it productive for you first before you add the shiny new thing. Like because I tried all these tools all the time, like, especially Paperclip. Paperclip blew up and a lot of people have been talking about it. And it's fantastic. But I'm willing to bet if people took two weeks to build up to the version, because you can prompt Open Claw to do all that stuff, if they built up their own version of Paperclip in two, three weeks, where like, they're building things that they actually need, their productivity level will skyrocket through the roof. It's a hot take. It's a hot take. Might get me in trouble. No, it won't get. Who's it going to get you in trouble with? Maybe Paperclip who uses a billion dollars and they don't acquire my podcast. I think, uh, listen, you're, you're out there. You're trying things and you're just sharing what you're learning in real time. So if you're just, Things can change, by the way. Like two weeks from now, it could be like, no, give the agent everything. There's this new memory paper that Google released and like now like it has the ability to index information and stuff, but as it is, as it pertains to real life, less is more. Simple is better, right? If you can't explain it in in a few sentences, you probably don't really understand it, right? And I find that the models are trained on so much information, especially when it comes to programming, building, and like, and, uh, what do you call like day-to-day work, like financial work or like any sort of, like, you know, checking contracts and stuff, they, the model companies are focusing on that like on white-collar work. The models are really, really good. What matters more is the harness and the tools you provide it. The context that you give it is going to matter even more. And just like in everything in life, less is more, right? Like building up step by step, making it productive for you first before you add the shiny new thing. Like because I tried all these tools all the time, like, especially Paperclip. Paperclip blew up and a lot of people have been talking about it. And it's fantastic. But I'm willing to bet if people took two weeks to build up to the version, because you can prompt Open Claw to do all that stuff, if they built up their own version of Paperclip in two, three weeks, where like, they're building things that they actually need, their productivity level will skyrocket through the roof. It's a hot take. It's a hot take. Might get me in trouble. No, it won't get. Who's it going to get you in trouble with? Maybe Paperclip who uses a billion dollars and they don't acquire my podcast. I think, uh, listen, you're, you're out there. You're trying things and you're just sharing what you're learning in real time. So if you're just, Things can change, by the way. Like two weeks from now, it could be like, no, give the agent everything. There's this new memory paper that Google released and like now like it has the ability to index information and stuff, but as it is, as it pertains to real life, less is more. Simple is better, right? If you can't explain it in in a few sentences, you probably don't really understand it, right? And I find that the models are trained on so much information, especially when it comes to programming, building, and like, and, uh, what do you call like day-to-day work, like financial work or like any sort of, like, you know, checking contracts and stuff, they, the model companies are focusing on that like on white-collar work. The models are really, really good. What matters more is the harness and the tools you provide it. The context that you give it is going to matter even more. And just like in everything in life, less is more, right? Like building up step by step, making it productive for you first before you add the shiny new thing. Like because I tried all these tools all the time, like, especially Paperclip. Paperclip blew up and a lot of people have been talking about it. And it's fantastic. But I'm willing to bet if people took two weeks to build up to the version, because you can prompt Open Claw to do all that stuff, if they built up their own version of Paperclip in two, three weeks, where like, they're building things that they actually need, their productivity level will skyrocket through the roof. It's a hot take. It's a hot take. Might get me in trouble. No, it won't get. Who's it going to get you in trouble with? Maybe Paperclip who uses a billion dollars and they don't acquire my podcast. I think, uh, listen, you're, you're out there. You're trying things and you're just sharing what you're learning in real time. So if you're just, Things can change, by the way. Like two weeks from now, it could be like, no, give the agent everything. There's this new memory paper that Google released and like now like it has the ability to index information and stuff, but as it is, as it pertains to real life, less is more. Simple is better, right? If you can't explain it in in a few sentences, you probably don't really understand it, right? And I find that the models are trained on so much information, especially when it comes to programming, building, and like, and, uh, what do you call like day-to-day work, like financial work or like any sort of, like, you know, checking contracts and stuff, they, the model companies are focusing on that like on white-collar work. The models are really, really good. What matters more is the harness and the tools you provide it. The context that you give it is going to matter even more. And just like in everything in life, less is more, right? Like building up step by step, making it productive for you first before you add the shiny new thing. Like because I tried all these tools all the time, like, especially Paperclip. Paperclip blew up and a lot of people have been talking about it. And it's fantastic. But I'm willing to bet if people took two weeks to build up to the version, because you can prompt Open Claw to do all that stuff, if they built up their own version of Paperclip in two, three weeks, where like, they're building things that they actually need, their productivity level will skyrocket through the roof. It's a hot take. It's a hot take. Might get me in trouble. No, it won't get. Who's it going to get you in trouble with? Maybe Paperclip who uses a billion dollars and they don't acquire my podcast. I think, uh, listen, you're, you're out there. You're trying things and you're just sharing what you're learning in real time. So if you're just, Things can change, by the way. Like two weeks from now, it could be like, no, give the agent everything. There's this new memory paper that Google released and like now like it has the ability to index information and stuff, but as it is, as it pertains to real life, less is more. Simple is better, right? If you can't explain it in in a few sentences, you probably don't really understand it, right? And I find that the models are trained on so much information, especially when it comes to programming, building, and like, and, uh, what do you call like day-to-day work, like financial work or like any sort of, like, you know, checking contracts and stuff, they, the model companies are focusing on that like on white-collar work. The models are really, really good. What matters more is the harness and the tools you provide it. The context that you give it is going to matter even more. And just like in everything in life, less is more, right? Like building up step by step, making it productive for you first before you add the shiny new thing. Like because I tried all these tools all the time, like, especially Paperclip. Paperclip blew up and a lot of people have been talking about it. And it's fantastic. But I'm willing to bet if people took two weeks to build up to the version, because you can prompt Open Claw to do all that stuff, if they built up their own version of Paperclip in two, three weeks, where like, they're building things that they actually need, their productivity level will skyrocket through the roof. It's a hot take. It's a hot take. Might get me in trouble. No, it won't get. Who's it going to get you in trouble with? Maybe Paperclip who uses a billion dollars and they don't acquire my podcast. I think, uh, listen, you're, you're out there. You're trying things and you're just sharing what you're learning in real time. So if you're just, Things can change, by the way. Like two weeks from now, it could be like, no, give the agent everything. There's this new memory paper that Google released and like now like it has the ability to index information and stuff, but as it is, as it pertains to real life, less is more. Simple is better, right? If you can't explain it in in a few sentences, you probably don't really understand it, right? And I find that the models are trained on so much information, especially when it comes to programming, building, and like, and, uh, what do you call like day-to-day work, like financial work or like any sort of, like, you know, checking contracts and stuff, they, the model companies are focusing on that like on white-collar work. The models are really, really good. What matters more is the harness and the tools you provide it. The context that you give it is going to matter even more. And just like in everything in life, less is more, right? Like building up step by step, making it productive for you first before you add the shiny new thing. Like because I tried all these tools all the time, like, especially Paperclip. Paperclip blew up and a lot of people have been talking about it. And it's fantastic. But I'm willing to bet if people took two weeks to build up to the version, because you can prompt Open Claw to do all that stuff, if they built up their own version of Paperclip in two, three weeks, where like, they're building things that they actually need, their productivity level will skyrocket through the roof. It's a hot take. It's a hot take. Might get me in trouble. No, it won't get. Who's it going to get you in trouble with? Maybe Paperclip who uses a billion dollars and they don't acquire my podcast. I think, uh, listen, you're, you're out there. You're trying things and you're just sharing what you're learning in real time. So if you're just, Things can change, by the way. Like two weeks from now, it could be like, no, give the agent everything. There's this new memory paper that Google released and like now like it has the ability to index information and stuff, but as it is, as it pertains to real life, less is more. Simple is better, right? If you can't explain it in in a few sentences, you probably don't really understand it, right? And I find that the models are trained on so much information, especially when it comes to programming, building, and like, and, uh, what do you call like day-to-day work, like financial work or like any sort of, like, you know, checking contracts and stuff, they, the model companies are focusing on that like on white-collar work. The models are really, really good. What matters more is the harness and the tools you provide it. The context that you give it is going to matter even more. And just like in everything in life, less is more, right? Like building up step by step, making it productive for you first before you add the shiny new thing. Like because I tried all these tools all the time, like, especially Paperclip. Paperclip blew up and a lot of people have been talking about it. And it's fantastic. But I'm willing to bet if people took two weeks to build up to the version, because you can prompt Open Claw to do all that stuff, if they built up their own version of Paperclip in two, three weeks, where like, they're building things that they actually need, their productivity level will skyrocket through the roof. It's a hot take. It's a hot take. Might get me in trouble. No, it won't get. Who's it going to get you in trouble with? Maybe Paperclip who uses a billion dollars and they don't acquire my podcast. I think, uh, listen, you're, you're out there. You're trying things and you're just sharing what you're learning in real time. So if you're just, Things can change, by the way. Like two weeks from now, it could be like, no, give the agent everything. There's this new memory paper that Google released and like now like it has the ability to index information and stuff, but as it is, as it pertains to real life, less is more. Simple is better, right? If you can't explain it in in a few sentences, you probably don't really understand it, right? And I find that the models are trained on so much information, especially when it comes to programming, building, and like, and, uh, what do you call like day-to-day work, like financial work or like any sort of, like, you know, checking contracts and stuff, they, the model companies are focusing on that like on white-collar work. The models are really, really good. What matters more is the harness and the tools you provide it. The context that you give it is going to matter even more. And just like in everything in life, less is more, right? Like building up step by step, making it productive for you first before you add the shiny new thing. Like because I tried all these tools all the time, like, especially Paperclip. Paperclip blew up and a lot of people have been talking about it. And it's fantastic. But I'm willing to bet if people took two weeks to build up to the version, because you can prompt Open Claw to do all that stuff, if they built up their own version of Paperclip in two, three weeks, where like, they're building things that they actually need, their productivity level will skyrocket through the roof. It's a hot take. It's a hot take. Might get me in trouble. No, it won't get. Who's it going to get you in trouble with? Maybe Paperclip who uses a billion dollars and they don't acquire my podcast. I think, uh, listen, you're, you're out there. You're trying things and you're just sharing what you're learning in real time. So if you're just, Things can change, by the way. Like two weeks from now, it could be like, no, give the agent everything. There's this new memory paper that Google released and like now like it has the ability to index information and stuff, but as it is, as it pertains to real life, less is more. Simple is better, right? If you can't explain it in in a few sentences, you probably don't really understand it, right? And I find that the models are trained on so much information, especially when it comes to programming, building, and like, and, uh, what do you call like day-to-day work, like financial work or like any sort of, like, you know, checking contracts and stuff, they, the model companies are focusing on that like on white-collar work. The models are really, really good. What matters more is the harness and the tools you provide it. The context that you give it is going to matter even more. And just like in everything in life, less is more, right? Like building up step by step, making it productive for you first before you add the shiny new thing. Like because I tried all these tools all the time, like, especially Paperclip. Paperclip blew up and a lot of people have been talking about it. And it's fantastic. But I'm willing to bet if people took two weeks to build up to the version, because you can prompt Open Claw to do all that stuff, if they built up their own version of Paperclip in two, three weeks, where like, they're building things that they actually need, their productivity level will skyrocket through the roof. It's a hot take. It's a hot take. Might get me in trouble. No, it won't get. Who's it going to get you in trouble with? Maybe Paperclip who uses a billion dollars and they don't acquire my podcast. I think, uh, listen, you're, you're out there. You're trying things and you're just sharing what you're learning in real time. So if you're just, Things can change, by the way. Like two weeks from now, it could be like, no, give the agent everything. There's this new memory paper that Google released and like now like it has the ability to index information and stuff, but as it is, as it pertains to real life, less is more. Simple is better, right? If you can't explain it in in a few sentences, you probably don't really understand it, right? And I find that the models are trained on so much information, especially when it comes to programming, building, and like, and, uh, what do you call like day-to-day work, like financial work or like any sort of, like, you know, checking contracts and stuff, they, the model companies are focusing on that like on white-collar work. The models are really, really good. What matters more is the harness and the tools you provide it. The context that you give it is going to matter even more. And just like in everything in life, less is more, right? Like building up step by step, making it productive for you first before you add the shiny new thing. Like because I tried all these tools all the time, like, especially Paperclip. Paperclip blew up and a lot of people have been talking about it. And it's fantastic. But I'm willing to bet if people took two weeks to build up to the version, because you can prompt Open Claw to do all that stuff, if they built up their own version of Paperclip in two, three weeks, where like, they're building things that they actually need, their productivity level will skyrocket through the roof. It's a hot take. It's a hot take. Might get me in trouble. No, it won't get. Who's it going to get you in trouble with?

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