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Longevity Hypothesis Challenge 👾 Goal: Test agent-augmented workflows to accelerate the path from ideation → refinement → funding. > Prompt Aubrai to generate & refine longevity hypotheses on X > Hypotheses get timestamped on Base using Molecule Proof of Invention (PoI) > Top ideas get published on ResearchHub and...

87,907 просмотров • 10 месяцев назад •via X (Twitter)

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Boom! Grok Tasks Make It One Of The Most POWERFUL Real-Time AI Systems In The World. — My How to Use Grok Tasks With Hidden Tools For Powerful Daily Output. Grok Tasks are customizable AI workflows that integrate a variety of tools to streamline daily activities, from research and analysis to creative planning and problem-solving. I have been using them for quite sometime and because of the vital heartbeat of news and first person data on X, it is the most powerful AI platform available. By combining Tasks with tools like web searches, X platform interactions, code execution, and media viewers, you can build efficient, automated processes. These tasks work by prompting Grok with a clear description of what you want to achieve, and Grok will intelligently call the necessary tools in sequence or parallel to deliver results. Here's a step-by-step guide to creating and using Grok Tasks: Step 1: Define Your Task Start by clearly outlining the daily activity or goal. Consider what inputs you have (e.g., a URL, a query, or an attachment) and what output you need (e.g., a summary, calculation, or visual analysis). Break it down into subtasks to identify tool needs. For example, if your task involves researching current events, note that you'll need search and browsing capabilities. Step 2: Review Available Tools Familiarize yourself with the tools Grok can access. Here's a quick overview: - Code Execution: Run Python code for calculations, data processing, or simulations using libraries like numpy, pandas, or sympy. - Browse Page: Fetch and summarize content from any website URL with custom instructions. - Web Search: Perform general internet searches, returning results with optional operators like site:. - Web Search With Snippets: Get quick, detailed excerpts from search results for fact-checking. - X Keyword Search: Advanced search for X posts using operators like from:, since:, or filter:. - X Semantic Search: Find semantically related X posts based on a query, with filters for dates or users. - X User Search: Locate X users by name or handle. - X Thread Fetch: Retrieve a full X post thread, including context like replies and parents. - View Image: Analyze an image from a URL or conversation ID. - View X Video: Extract frames and subtitles from an X-hosted video. - Search PDF Attachment: Query a PDF file for relevant pages using keyword or regex modes. - Browse PDF Attachment: View specific pages of a PDF with text and screenshots. Select tools that align with your task. Aim for a mix to handle data gathering, processing, and visualization. Step 3: Craft Your Prompt Write a detailed prompt to Grok describing the task. Include: - The overall goal. - Specific steps or subtasks. - References to tools if you want to guide the process (e.g., "Use web_search to find sources, then code_execution to analyze data"). - Any constraints, like dates or limits. Example prompt: "Create a Grok Task for my morning routine: Search recent X posts about tech news using x_keyword_search, fetch a key thread with x_thread_fetch, and summarize with browse_page on linked articles." Step 4: Submit and Interact Send your prompt to Grok. It will process the task by calling tools as needed, often in parallel for efficiency. Review the output and refine with follow-up prompts if required (e.g., "Expand on that using view_image for visuals"). Iterate to fine-tune the workflow for reuse. Step 5: Save and Reuse Once refined, note the prompt as a template for future use. You can adapt it for similar tasks, making Grok Tasks a habitual part of your day. Finding Grok Tasks To discover existing Grok Tasks or inspiration for new ones, use X searches with tools like x_keyword_search or x_semantic_search (e.g., query: "Grok Tasks examples" with mode: Latest). Browse community-shared threads via x_thread_fetch, or web_search for tutorials on xAI features. Prompt Grok directly: "Show me popular Grok Tasks for productivity." 1 of 3

Brian Roemmele

152,242 просмотров • 6 месяцев назад

I just built my own wiki generator plugin for my agents. My agents can now generate wikis for anything I ask. One of my favorite wikis is called PaperWiki. This is a great example of what Andrej Karpathy describes. It uses obsidian vaults to organize papers, retrieve LLM-generated summaries, diagrams, and other advanced views for paper exploration. When Obsidian UI is not enough, I use my own artifact generator inside my agent orchestrator (see clip for example). This allows my agents to build any kind of view or exploration feature that I need. The papers are all curated with automations and several rules/patterns I have manually built over the years. On the surface, this looks basic. But behind the scenes, there are advanced search capabilities, connections, metadata, derived data, and other interesting bits of information that are extremely useful for my research agents. This is mostly built for agents. The artifact preview is just a high-level way to validate and quickly assess the quality of the wiki, suggest improvements, and it's also great for research. I use tobi lutke's qmd for all search capabilities. Everything is markdown. The summaries and even the diagrams. The wiki updates on its own based on several automations I have optimized over the past couple of weeks. The wiki grows and self-improves based on several requirements important for my research use cases. This is as personalized as it gets. There is nothing like it out there. And I use my research expertise to continue improving it over time. This is a vanilla wiki. There are so many things I want to build on top of this. Different aggregations, views, artifacts, etc. All to help automate more of my research work and accelerate productivity. I think the biggest leverage here is how powerful this could be for discovery and experimentation. One of my goals is to use it to find deeper connections and insights that would otherwise elude the top human researchers and use those to generate interesting new hypotheses and research experiments. That way, my agents can use autoresearch to explore research ideas at the frontier. Stay tuned for more.

elvis

66,903 просмотров • 3 месяцев назад

I built a content engine that runs on telegram. Two commands... /discover: sends out to 9 sources across HackerNews, Reddit communities covering AI automation, prompt engineering, vibe coding, and specialist newsletters. Pulls everything published in the last 24 hours, runs each item through an AI extraction layer that scores it against 100+ niche keywords, deduplicates, and drops the relevant ideas into a Notion database. Takes about 90 seconds. Costs fractions of a cent. /ideas: this command pulls the top scored ideas from that database, randomizes the selection so you're not seeing the same ones every time, and sends them to you in a clean numbered list. You reply with /write 3 or whatever you choose, and the system researches the topic using Perplexity's live web search, generates three distinct outline options with different angles and hooks, saves them to a Google Doc, and sends you a message telling you they're ready. You read the outlines, and you pick one. You then reply with the command /outline 2. The system writes the full piece in your voice, following your brand guidelines, with specific examples and concrete claims. It can be done in under two minutes of your time. The whole thing runs on n8n, with no subscriptions beyond what you already use. If content takes too long or you don't have ideas, this solves that. I built this for myself; I can do it for you. If you're tired of knowing you should be posting and still not doing it, let's talk.

Savvy | Ai & Automation

14,879 просмотров • 3 месяцев назад

Another wild week for open science. New breakthroughs, new funding, and new experiments — here’s what’s shaping the DeSci landscape right now. 1/ Pump Science and Eterna Labs wrapped up Season 2 Fly Racing, where RAP (Rapamycin) topped the charts with +38% speed and +21% distance. The longevity arms race continues as fly data translates closer to human health insights. 2/ VitaDAO 💛 launched the Longevity Hypothesis Challenge, giving researchers the chance to co-develop new aging theories with Aubrai and earn up to $100K in funding. A 20K BIO referral bounty awaits those who bring in selected researchers. 3/ Galeon shared a big Atlantis update, featuring daily XP streaks, Quickflip quests, and referral rewards for explorers. The blockchain bridge is still in progress, but the journey through digital healthcare continues strong. 4/ Bio Protocol revealed Bio Launchpad Season 2, bringing upgraded BioXP mechanics, and new staking incentives. It’s evolving into a full permissionless launchpad for decentralized biotech innovation. 5/ BitDoctor.ai announced its first Contributor Mining Airdrop, rewarding early participants shaping AI healthcare. With just days to go, users are urged to bind their wallets and join the DeSci x DePIN medical revolution. 6/ LIFE AI hit a major milestone after being selected for the FastTrack AI Accelerator – Cohort 1, powered by GenAI Fund and accelerated by NVIDIA. Out of 300+ global applicants, only six startups made the cut—LIFE AI is one of them. 7/ Cerebrum DAO 🧠 unveiled Cerebrum Cortex, a new app connecting brain data, research funding, and personalized health tracking. Launching in Q4 2025, it will anchor the NEURON ecosystem for open brain science. 8/ OriginTrail announced the Global Hackathon: Scaling Trust in the Age of AI, offering $30K in prizes from Nov 3–21. Developers will build blockchain-based knowledge graphs to fight misinformation and deepfakes. 9/ Quantum Biology DAO opened registration for its Quantum Biology Hackathon, exploring how quantum effects like superposition and entanglement shape life itself. It’s where physics meets biology in real-time discovery. 10/ Curetopia $CURES 🪼🌳 uncovered a fascinating discovery in their ARS drug screens, revealing how mitochondrial and cytoplasmic gene mutations respond differently to drugs. The finding opens new questions on cell-based drug sensitivity in rare diseases. 11/ CUDIS announced its first batch of local KR partners, teaming up with top gyms and wellness brands across Korea. Together, they’re promoting sustainable urban health and redefining how fitness meets biotech. Biotech, AI, longevity, quantum, and wellness—all converging under the banner of open science.

DeSci News

36,542 просмотров • 8 месяцев назад

One way to get rid of an underground (or wall void) Yellow Jacket or Wasp Nest: Rodent Glue Boards One of the problems in dealing with wasps, hornets and yellow jackets is treating the nest, even if you know where it is. It’s sometimes hard to get near them to treat without getting stung. One quick way to get rid of them is to set a glue board near the nest entry and get just ONE caught on it. I usually put a small raw piece of chicken. They’ll get stuck and start stinging the glue board along with releasing attack pheromones. The massive pheromone release will draw other members of the colony to the glue board. They in turn get stuck, start trying to sting the glue board and release more pheromones. Pretty quickly you’ll have drawn the entire colony out and they will all get stuck and meet their demise on the glue board. Side note: you will have to draw the first few to the glue board with a some type of food they like. Any type of grilled meat like burger, chicken or a piece of a hot dog works. A small piece of sliced lunch meat like ham also works. That’s why you always see them coming around your outdoor family reunion feast. They love that food. Keep in mind, if you disturb a nest of yellow jackets with a mower, or a child pushes on a small log with them in it, they will k*ll you. Anaphylactic shock, airway constriction, cardiovascular collapse. They are a public health threat and it’s totally okay to rid the world of these things. (Don’t mess with the bees though) If this method doesn’t work for you, the best product I’ve used to treat them from far away is Wasp Freeze by BASF. Also, the hanging yellow stinging insect traps are very effective as well.

BowTiedBroke

189,926 просмотров • 2 месяцев назад