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A Chinese developer in Shenzhen was scrolling Twitter when he saw a 31 second clip of a Tokyo University student saying the trick to anything is starting for 5 minutes. He opened Claude and typed one line. Build me something that changes my life. You have 5 minutes. The...

17,952 görüntüleme • 1 ay önce •via X (Twitter)

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Two Chinese developers recorded a 4 minute video showing how to build a team of 7 AI agents that replaces an entire customer support department for $50 a month. They opened a terminal. In 4 minutes they had the whole thing running. One agent classifies tickets. One reads the knowledge base. One handles billing. One watches the customer's tone. One decides when to escalate. One writes the report. One agent runs the other six. The math hit hard. 1,200 tickets a day per person. More than a call center of 8 operators. The company used to pay $25,000 to $40,000 a month in salaries. Now they pay $50 for the API. The video hit 4 million views in 72 hours. Every CEO in China was forwarding it. Every support team in America was panicking. While the West is still debating whether AI will replace workers, China just published the manual. These guys were teaching people how to fire a department. They just showed too much. Bro pause at 0:39. Ignore the guy in the blue shirt pointing. Look at the second monitor on the right. That window is not a support dashboard. That is a live wallet. gabagool22. $868,862 profit. 28,620 predictions. Joined October 2025. → They were filming a tutorial about replacing humans with cheap AI. Their own setup behind them was running an AI that replaces traders. 28,620 positions. All BTC. All 15 minute windows. All green. The comment section turned into a detective board. Someone slowed the video to 0.5x. Screenshotted every frame where the right monitor was visible. Stitched them together. Reconstructed the full wallet page from 6 seconds of background footage. Entry prices between 2 and 10 cents. Payouts in the thousands. Not one red row in 28,620 entries. Biggest single win: $4,696. From a 15 minute window on a Tuesday. The 7 support agents save a company $40K a month. The wallet on their second monitor makes that in one good week. The tutorial taught the world how to replace a customer support team. The setup behind them was already replacing the trading desk. They deleted the wallet zoom from the next upload. Too late. Someone had already screen recorded it. The clip hit Discord. Then Telegram. Then every dev forum. The tutorial got 4 million views. The zoom on their second monitor got another 800,000. 727K people watching the wallet now. The 7 agents are still answering tickets somewhere for $50 a month. The wallet behind them does not need 7 agents. It needs one. And that one was already running while they filmed.

Carver

234,210 görüntüleme • 1 ay önce

🚨 Chinese developers just dropped a 4-minute video and GitHub Repo that’s exploding the internet. They opened a terminal… and in just 4 minutes built a team of 7 AI agents that completely replace an entire customer support department. Cost? > Only $50 a month. > One agent classifies tickets. > One reads the knowledge base. > One handles billing. > One watches the customer’s tone. > One decides when to escalate. > One writes the reports. And one agent runs all the other six. The results? Brutal. 1,200 tickets a day per agent. More than a full call center of 8 human operators. Companies used to spend $25,000–$40,000 per month on salaries. Now they pay just $50 for the API. The video hit 4 million views in 72 hours. Every CEO in China was forwarding it. Every support team in America is panicking. While the West is still debating “Will AI replace jobs?”… China just published the actual manual on how to fire an entire department. But wait it gets way crazier. Pause the video at 0:39. Ignore the guy in the blue shirt. Look at the second monitor on the right. That’s not a support dashboard. That’s a live trading wallet. > Username: gabagool22 > $868,862 profit > 28,620 predictions > All on Bitcoin > All 15-minute windows Every single one green. Profile: Copying his trades: GitHub: The comment section turned into a detective agency. People slowed the video to 0.5x, screenshot every frame, and stitched the full wallet together from just 6 seconds of background footage. Entry prices: 2 to 10 cents. Payouts: thousands of dollars. Not one red trade in 28,620 bets. Biggest single win? $4,696 in one 15-minute window. Here’s the insane part: The 7 AI agents save a company $40K a month. The wallet on their second monitor makes that money in one good week. They were teaching the world how to replace humans with cheap AI. Meanwhile, their own setup behind the camera was already replacing traders. They deleted the wallet zoom in the next upload. Too late. Someone screen-recorded it anyway. The tutorial got 4 million views. The secret wallet clip got another 800K. Now 727K people are staring at that wallet. The 7 agents are still answering tickets somewhere for $50 a month. But the wallet behind them? It doesn’t need 7 agents. It only needs one. And that one was already running while they were filming. Mind officially blown Screenshot it. Send it to a friend. And ask yourself: what’s running on your second monitor?

AdiiX

23,167 görüntüleme • 1 ay önce

A Japanese TV crew filmed the CEO of a 7 billion yen fast food chain for a feature on Japan's humble corporate culture. His head office in Shinagawa had 3 desks and cost 103,000 yen a month in rent. The office was that small because a Claude agent did the procurement, pricing, and contract work that normally fills three floors. The crew showed the office. Two desks. One printer. Three employees. A rice cooker in the corner. The TV banner introduced him as the entrepreneur whose chain of snack shops sources rice directly from 312 farmers across Japan. At 0:43 he says the word fleet. He says it once. He says it without looking at the camera. The crew kept the line because they thought he meant his delivery vans. He did not mean delivery vans. He meant the fleet of Claude agents that runs every part of his company that does not require a human signature. The two desks at headquarters are for him and the CFO. The third employee is there to answer the phone. One agent reads daily yield data from 312 rice farmers and sets the next morning's wholesale price for each variety. A second agent routes 47 stores worth of inventory based on the previous day's POS data. A third agent drafts every franchise contract and every supplier renewal. He signs every morning before the office opens. Japanese commercial law is satisfied. Someone pulled the company's filings on the Tokyo commercial registry. Every contract filed in the last 14 months had been timestamped between 5:47 AM and 6:03 AM. Every supplier renewal used the same boilerplate clauses, written in slightly different prose each time. The morning shots in the TV segment showed an empty office because the agent had already done the work of 40 employees overnight. Six months ago a 14 year old in Shenzhen pushed an AI agent to GitHub. Judges said no real world application. 3,100 forks later. The CEO had been one of them. He still flies to rice paddies every spring. He still personally tastes every new variety before it gets a code in the system. He still tells investors the head office rent is 103,000 yen because it builds trust. He still has not told the farmers that the agent decided who got the new orders last quarter. The TV crew thought the rundown head office was a story about a humble entrepreneur. It was actually a story about how many employees a 7 billion yen company does not need when one CEO signs what one Claude agent writes.

Carver

142,608 görüntüleme • 17 gün önce

THIS GUY CONNECTED HIS AI AGENTS TO HIS OBSIDIAN AND BUILT A BRAIN THAT LEARNS ON ITS OWN. HERE'S HOW TO BUILD IT Obsidian is just markdown files sitting in a folder. That turns out to be the perfect memory for an AI agent, because an agent can read and write those files directly. He wired his agents into the vault so they pull context from it, do the work, and write what they learned back. The notes aren't the point. The loop is, and it gets sharper every cycle How to build it: 1. Point an agent at your vault. The fastest way, no plugins, no API keys: open a terminal and run npx obsidian-mcp /path/to/your/vault. That exposes your Obsidian folder to Claude as a tool it can read, search, and write to. Add it to your Claude Code or Cowork config and restart 2. Confirm it can see the brain. Ask it: "list the notes in my vault and summarize what's in them." If it reads them back, the connection is live. Now it starts every task with everything the vault already holds instead of from zero 3. Give each agent one job and a write-back rule. Tell it: "research this, then save what you found as a new note in /brain with links to related notes." One agent researches, one summarizes, one plans. Each writes its output back into the vault 4. Close the loop. Add one line to every agent's instructions: "read /brain before starting, write your result back when done." Now each task leaves the vault richer, and the next run reads that before it works. It compounds instead of resetting 5. You only steer. Review what the brain produces, point it at the next thing. The agents handle the reading, writing, and connecting The edge isn't better notes. It's a brain that feeds itself, so the work gets sharper every cycle instead of starting over Bookmark this

Yarchi

57,768 görüntüleme • 19 gün önce