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I keep saying the same thing and people keep not believing me.... So here's another one. Zac's family runs a $100M+ commercial roofing business. North Shore Masonry was a "side project" for the family, but since Zac took over, it's becoming a massive business. 5 months ago Zac couldn't...

64,428 次观看 • 2 个月前 •via X (Twitter)

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Andrew Wilkinson owns 40+ businesses. He just showed me how he's using OpenClaw, Claude Code and AI agents to run latest business, start new ones, and automate everything. Here's what I learned: 1. In December 2025, something clicked. He started waking up at 3AM with a smile, sitting in terminal with 10 Claude Code tabs open. He hasn't stopped since. He calls it chasing the dragon. 2.He built a full SaaS product called Deep Personality. A 40-minute personality test that generates a 100-page report written like Robert Greene. $20 000 in revenue. Zero employees. The entire business runs on AI agents. 3. He has agents for support, marketing, and dev. When a support ticket comes in, the agent either handles it or sends it to the dev agent. If it's critical, the agent fixes the bug and merges the PR before he wakes up. Then it emails the customer back. 4. His marketing agent is connected to PostHog, manages Meta and Reddit ads, creates ad creative, runs multivariate tests, and sets budgets. He's about to give it a $100 k/month ad budget and see what happens. 5. He forgot his laptop on a trip to Arizona. He ran his entire business from the back of Ubers using OpenClaw. Nobody picked up that every single email was written by AI. 6. His take on vibe coding: the worst part about business is people. Between your vision and execution are 100 people you have to convince. Vibe coding removes all of them. For the first time he can do every part of building a product himself. 7. He was trying to build OpenClaw before OpenClaw existed. Now he uses a tool called Harbor, which is basically a GUI for managing multiple agents. You can see all your agents, their status, knowledge bases, and databases in one place. 8. He built a custom AI for his relationship. He and his girlfriend took 15 psychological tests, put the results into ChatGPT, and asked it to analyze their relationship. It nailed every fight they've ever had. That became the product idea for Deep Personality. 9. His honest take: he spends 50% of his time debugging, 30% improving the setup, and 20% being productive. It's a treadmill. But the 20% that works is so powerful he can't stop. 10. His prediction: we're 3-6 months from being able to hand basic businesses off to AI to run entirely. And pretty soon Anthropic and OpenAI are going to launch AI CEOs. This is an inside look at how a serious operator Andrew Wilkinson is using AI agents in the real world. The good, the bad, the debugging, all of it. Most people don't show you this. Episode is live on The Startup Ideas Podcast (SIP) 🧃 watch

GREG ISENBERG

144,005 次观看 • 1 个月前

Alex Mason DIDNT DIE IN BO2 Canon Ending And Black Ops 7 Campaign Actually PROVES IT *PROOF* The BO7 Cradle requires David to help Character to escape the Cradle, Different Versions of Characters appear like BO2 Flashback Woods that believes he killed Alex Mason. 1. At first, David Mason is actually Confused because of what he's saying but quickly realises its a Young Version of Woods, To escape the Cradle he has to tell BO2 Woods to Forgive himself and its not his fault like he told 2025 BO2 Woods, as he wont believe Alex Mason is alive. He also says its a Nightmare and does not even bother to lift the mask as he knows Alex Mason is alive and comes back in 2025 and snaps out of it and re-assures Woods that he was tricked and its OK. Later in the Campaign, David Mason outright says he never lost Alex Mason to test what would happen to the Cradle and it had no effect as its a happy memory. 2. The Woods killing Alex Mason memory actually also proves the BO2 Campaign Good Ending as Woods was told Menendez was the Target on a CIA Mission, which he knows would not be possible as Woods has Intel that Menendez has CIA Memo'sMole, Leading to Menendez not completely succeeding in manipulating Woods in BO2's Best Ending. Its also said that All I Had To Do Was Take That Shot, This could be the BO7 Cradle feeding off the Negative outcome that could have easily been, He could be refering to the Headshot like he was being told by Hudson and Noriega which would have killed him, This is a more weak point but i think this and the previous point work together well. This Version of Woods could also very easily be one that did actually kill Alex Mason as the BO7 Cradle would feed off that negative moment where 2025 BO2 Woods told David he had killed Alex Mason. 3. Finally, David Mason's memories shows him climbing a tree as a Core Happy Memory, However without the BO2 Good Ending, He looms over this event with regret since he fell, but 2025 Alex Mason corrects him saying he was proud.

HustlerRelic😎

121,491 次观看 • 7 个月前

I'm a remodeling contractor and 14-year Army Special Operations veteran. For almost 10 years I've fought the same battle every trade business owner fights. Admin, lead follow-up, emails, scheduling, estimating, invoicing. All the stuff that isn't building. Then I got an AI agent. It now manages most of that for me. I stay in the field and build actual stuff for my clients. So I thought, why not put this in the hands of other tradesmen? I built Blue Collar OS. Here's what the data says: construction, installation, and repair trades have massive AI capability but almost zero actual usage. The tools exist. Nobody's built them for blue collar. So I started putting agents in the hands of tradesmen. Here's what happened: Rodney is a 62-year-old local plumber. He paid me to set up an agent on a Mac Mini in his office. He canceled a $40,000 consulting contract and built a pricing app for his field techs. In the first weekend. Matt owns Flo Glass Company. Built an entire customer portal for his business, including pricing apps for his technicians. His words: "We removed the biggest limiting factor in growing my company. Coders are in trouble." These aren't tech founders. They're tradesmen. A plumber, a glass guy. Building software because AI met them where they are. On their phone. In plain English. There are 30 million trade businesses doing over $2 trillion in revenue in the United States. Less than 1% are using AI. Not because they can't. Because nobody built it for them. 4 out of 5 of those businesses have zero office staff. The owner does everything. We gave them a chief of staff for less monthly than their cell phone bill... (not including tokens)

Nathan Spearing

30,348 次观看 • 3 个月前

Chris Mason, "Viewers say your time as prime minister left the UK as an international laughing stock" Liz Truss, "I don't think that's true" Chris Mason, " Your mini budget, viewers blame you for mortgages going sky high, for the country feeling poorer, for the economy getting into a spin and say that you were the author of that and it was a disaster" Liz Truss, " Well, I don't agree with that" Chris Mason, "Do you think that you believe the governor should be out?" Liz Truss, "I don't support his continuation in the job.. We didn't know we were sitting on a tinderbox" Chris Mason, "Which you set fire to" Liz Truss, " Well, I'm not saying I'm perfect and, you know, nobody's perfect" Chris Mason, " You talk in the book about the deep state. Isn't that to indulge in conspiracy theory kind of quackery?" Liz Truss, "Well, it's a description of a group of people, an orthodoxy, a groupthink that is not accountable to electors" Chris Mason, " You offer plenty of praise of Donald Trump in the book. Do you hope he wins again in the autumn?" Liz Truss, "Yes, I do" Chris Mason, "Why?: Liz Truss, "Because I believe that we need a strong America under Donald Trump. When he was president of the United States, the world was safer" Chris Mason, "The smoking ban that Rishi Sunak is suggesting" Liz Truss, " We're a free country. We shouldn't be telling people not to smoke" Chris Mason, "Is Rishi Sunak Conservative?" Liz Truss, "I think the policy is unconservative and we are ill advised to be pursuing it" Chris Mason, "Let's talk, then about the future of the conservative party. Could Nigel Farage be a welcome addition?" Liz Truss, "I think it would be good if he joined the conservative party and became an MP" Chris Mason, "Why?" Liz Truss, " Because I think he believes in conservative values. I think it's a shame he's not in the conservative party"

Farrukh

519,603 次观看 • 2 年前

In 1921, a boy named Abdul was born in Ludhiana, Punjab. His father was a wealthy and powerful landlord, but he wasn't exactly a "family man." He was arrogant, unkind, and had a habit of collecting wives,12 of them, to be exact. Abdul’s mother was wife number eleven, and despite the crowded family tree, Abdul was the only son the man ever had. ​His father didn't care much for love or the women he married, he only cared about having an heir. When Abdul’s mother finally couldn't take his cruelty anymore, she decided to leave. Had she left by herself, he probably wouldn't have blinked, but she took the boy with her. That was a dealbreaker. ​The father threatened to kidnap the child and dragged the whole mess to court. Eventually, the judge looked at young Abdul and asked who he wanted to live with. The boy didn't hesitate - "My Mother." ​From that day on, it was the two of them against the world. She sold her jewelry to pay for his school and keep them afloat. Abdul traded a life of luxury for a life of integrity, and it clearly paid off. He grew up to be one of India’s most famous poets, taking the pen name Sahir and adding Ludhianvi to honor his hometown. ​Even as he became a superstar, his bond with his mother stayed at the center of his life. He looked after her with total devotion, never forgetting that she chose his freedom over her own comfort. ​Sahir was also a bit of a troublemaker for the authorities. He was a vocal communist, and after writing an article that the Pakistani government didn't appreciate in 1949, an arrest warrant was issued. He headed back across the border to the side where he was born and spent the rest of his life using his lyrics to fight for secularism and socialist values. ​He was even the first lyricist to stand up to big music companies and demand royalties. Today, on his birth anniversary, we remember the rebel who turned his struggles into the songs we still hum today. "Kabe me raho ya Kashi me raho..." Movie : Dharmputra

𝓼𝓪𝓷𝓴𝓪𝓻

55,561 次观看 • 3 个月前

CNN’s Kristen Holmes: “I just want to point out one thing before we get into the power and influential person that Charlie Kirk was..not just a political activist. He was also a father and a husband. And you have to remember something when you talk about Donald Trump's campaign and the team that got him elected, it was a very small, very tight knit group of people. It was loyalists, people who were gathered around Donald Trump working in and out every day. And Charlie Kirk was part of that movement. So, when you're talking to these White House advisers and staffers and friends of the President, it's not just them looking at the death of an icon and a movement leader, as we've heard, it's also them looking at the death of a very close friend and somebody they spent an enormous amount of time with...[T]hat's why you're seeing such a sadness and a disbelief from so many people close to the President. And when it comes to talking strictly about his influence and his power within Washington, I mean, one of the things to keep in mind here is that this is somebody who had a direct line to President Trump who could voice his objections to President Trump at times, he could voice what he thought was important and not being covered enough by the administration. He spoke to many, if not all, of the cabinet secretaries directly. He had a finger on the pulse of the MAGA movement, even more so than some people who are here in Washington who got government positions. If you look at the crowd that had gathered around Kirk, that was just one example of the kind of crowds that Kirk would draw. He was truly a movement leader, as we've heard. He would bring thousands and thousands of people together, and that was why he was so critical beyond just the personal to the campaign to President Trump...So, there are a lot of different levels of all of this. The influence, the power, the — the connection to the base, but also the family and the relationships that Charlie Kirk had built with all of the Trumps. We have seen the children responding each individually about their relationships with Charlie Kirk saying to pray for him and his family.”

Curtis Houck

1,160,867 次观看 • 9 个月前