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@Is_That_Praveen We follow each other. I made you lists of everyone in AI that I can find: https://t.co/fasUz7PuHq Then we make AIs to read them all and help us keep up: https://t.co/kiuZ7QXLzb
wow - Gemini 2.5 Deep Think https://t.co/aDeH61XRSv
wow - Gemini 2.5 Deep Think https://t.co/aDeH61XRSv
Introducing Website to App. Turn any website into an native mobile app. Just paste a URL. Claude Opus 4.6 will code, design, launch and translate a mobile app inspired by the original website. Weโve been using this internally a ton for iOS/Android apps. https://t.co/45Gp0cl3Cz
๐๐ฒ๐ฟ๐บ๐ฒ๐ ๐๐ด๐ฒ๐ป๐ ๐ท๐๐๐ ๐ฎ๐ฑ๐ฑ๐ฒ๐ฑ ๐๐ป๐ฑ๐ฟ๐ฒ๐ท ๐๐ฎ๐ฟ๐ฝ๐ฎ๐๐ต๐'๐ ๐๐๐ ๐ช๐ถ๐ธ๐ถ ๐ฎ๐ ๐ฎ ๐ฏ๐๐ถ๐น๐-๐ถ๐ป ๐๐ธ๐ถ๐น๐น ๐๐ต๐ฎ๐ ๐ฏ๐๐ถ๐น๐ฑ๐ ๐ฎ ๐ธ๐ป๐ผ๐๐น๐ฒ๐ฑ๐ด๐ฒ ๐ฏ๐ฎ๐๐ฒ ๐๐ต๐ฎ๐ ๐ด๐ฒ๐๐ ๐๐บ๐ฎ๐ฟ๐๐ฒ๐ฟ ๐ฒ๐๐ฒ๐ฟ๐ ๐๐ฒ๐๐๐ถ๐ผ๐ป. Every time you use AI for research today it starts from scratch tomorrow. This fixes that permanently. Here's how it works: โ Run: hermes update. Then type /llm_wiki followed by your research topic. โ Drop any source into your raw folder. Hermes reads it, extracts key info, and integrates it into the existing wiki automatically. โ One new source can update 10 to 15 connected pages at once. โ Ask a question. The answer gets filed back into the wiki as a new page. Your explorations compound just like your sources do. โ Ask Hermes to health-check the wiki. It finds contradictions, stale pages, and missing connections on its own. Karpathy's document got 5,000 GitHub stars in 48 hours. The idea is simple. Stop rediscovering the same information every time. Let the AI build and maintain a structured wiki that sits between you and your raw sources. Humans abandon wikis because the maintenance burden grows faster than the value. An AI agent doesn't get bored. Doesn't forget a cross reference. Touches 15 files in one pass.
Yesterday we launched Otio 2.0. Today, here's the 2-minute walkthrough. Workspaces that keep every project in its own context. Parallel chats side by side. Highlight straight in the reader view and ask Otio on the spot. Capture tables, graphs, and diagrams directly into a chat. Every citation traces back to the exact page.
A new phase of scientific discovery is beginning. AI is enabling researchers to learn, reason and tackle complex biological challenges in ways that were previously not possible. This is more than acceleration. It is changing how discovery itself happens. https://t.co/yEh5pmDu5X @ConversationUS
๐บ๐ธ Sundar Pichai had high praise for Elon after spending time with him: โLook, I spent time with Elon maybe two weeks ago. When I talked to him, his ability to will future technologies into existence is just unparalleled.โ https://t.co/B7XW4YbYGG
Elon: Do things that make you want to live โWeโve got to be excited about the future. We have to do things that make us want to live. It canโt always be about problems every day. Do you really want to wake up every morning and everything is just a problem? What inspires yo
@BLUECOW009 Yes! You should listen to the recording of the space we did earlier with @NousResearchโs CTO. https://t.co/FusXAWSnIN
Runs just fine on my sonโs old Mac Mini. https://t.co/Fe5XfDuxnW
Lots of power users going from OpenClaw to Hermes Agent
Everyone's too scared to tell you, but your screen recordings look like shit. Even your mom, who smiles politely, thinks, "Really? Again with the Loom slop?" It's time to step it up, founder. Add cinematic lens blur to your demo videos in 2 min: https://t.co/TylEqOClJR
@shivkanthb ok find me this https://t.co/EczQRcw3Fj
Every tiny dot you see here is a star, most with their own planets countless hiding in the dark In all this vastness, we might be the only conscious minds in this entire Universe If consciousness is really that rare, it makes us the most precious thing in the universe We have a massive responsibility to protect it. Becoming a multi-planetary species is not just about exploration - it is about ensuring the light of consciousness does not go out. Earth is our starting point..... "One day, we will be out there, among the starsโ โ Elon Musk
@BLUECOW009 Yes sir! https://t.co/O2bo4unxkO
@elonmusk โฆ or beauty. https://t.co/9F8ITAiJCE
Opus 4.6 vs GPT-5.4 https://t.co/j2Zp9eTGC4

Opus 4.6 vs GPT-5.4 https://t.co/j2Zp9eTGC4

Elon talks about how Starship was built, and it really puts things into perspective This is "probably the biggest thing ever made by pure human hands" โข Created entirely pre-AI โข "At the limit of biological intelligence" โข Driven entirely by our "20-watt meat computers" Literally pushing engineering to its absolute peak When AGI finally arrives, it's going to look at Starship and say, "Not bad for a human"
The World Tour is coming to the home of tech itself. AgentCon Silicon Valley is HERE! We're heading to the Computer History Museum, Mountain View, where better to talk about the future of AI agents? ๐๏ธ Monday, 4 May 2026 ๐ https://t.co/gVRxqQytEl See you in the Valley #AgentCon #GlobalAICommunity #AIAgents #AgentConSiliconValley #SiliconValley @neo4j @CircleCI @pendoio @Microsoft

Multica will support @NousResearch Hermes Agent this week. Soon, you'll be able to deploy an army of Hermes Agents to boost your business. https://t.co/MwodPz6seP
We created the open source version of Claude Managed Agents. Introducing Multica https://t.co/mLCPJe965E https://t.co/EyLwrfmgOj
Yosemite Valley is putting on a show right now. As warmer temperatures melt snowpack at higher elevations, waterfalls and creeks are rushing with water. Video by @YosemiteNPS https://t.co/pUdZzXh4VB
Project Hail Mary writer Andy Weir on social commentary in books: "I dislike social commentary. Likeโฆ I really hate it. When Iโm reading a book, I just want to be entertained, not preached at by the author. Plus, it ruins the wonder of the story if I know the author has a political or social axe to grind. I no longer speculate about all possible outcomes of the story because I know for a fact that the universe of that book will conspire to ensure that the authorโs political agenda is validated. I hate that." "I put no politics or social commentary into my stories at all. Anyone who thinks they see something like that is reading it in on their own. I have no point to make, and Iโm not trying to affect the readerโs opinion on anything. My sole job is to entertain, and I stick to that." "To that end, I also donโt talk about my personal political opinions publicly. I donโt want readers to even know, honestly. I donโt want that in the back of their minds as they read my stuff." Is this why he has the #1 sci-fi movie in decades?

Mark Zuckerberg on why large companies keep losing to startups: "Large companies are slow and they lack conviction." Mark reflects on one of the most puzzling questions about Facebook's rise: why didn't a bigger company build it first? "It wasn't like it was a super novel idea. There was Friendster before, there was MySpace, there's all this stuff. Google, Microsoft, Yahoo โ they all had versions of it. Why didn't they do it?" It wasn't a talent problem. The resources were there. The engineers were there. Facebook, by contrast, was built by what Mark calls "a rag tag group of children." So what went wrong inside those big companies? Mark traces it to how large organisations respond to doubt: "People doubt new ideas before they come to fruition. The narrative with social networking is like, 'Ah, it's just a college kid thing.' Maybe it's a fad. Maybe it won't make money. Maybe mobile will kill it." By the time each layer of doubt was disproved, it was already too late. And the real culprit? Middle management. "There's probably some team buried deep inside those companies that believed in it, and probably some VP person who was like, 'Eh, that's probably not the biggest priority,' and just poured some sand in the gears." One cautious decision at one level. That's all it takes to kill a category-defining opportunity. Mark extends this beyond Facebook. Even for opportunities that seem tailor-made for large companies, where they hold a clear distribution advantage, he's blunt about the odds: "I would guess that big companies are going to fumble two-thirds of those." And the opportunities that don't plug into existing distribution channels? He calls those "just kind of free," wide open for whoever moves first. The pattern is consistent: size creates hesitation, hesitation creates delay, and delay hands the market to whoever was willing to act before the idea was proven.
Demis Hassabis says AGI was meant to be built like CERN. Carefully, with full understanding at each step. Thatโs not the world we find ourselves in. Weโre rushing to bring AGI into the world under pressure in race conditions. https://t.co/IakTZs8BRs
Peter Lynch on investing: "You donโt need to be perfect... just right more often than youโre wrong" https://t.co/y6Wq7LEC1X
Warren Buffett: "Growth [in zero-cost float] has not generally been appreciated fully in connection with Berkshire." "People have always looked at our asset side, but they haven't paid as much attention to the liability side. Charlie and I pay a lot of attention to that." https://t.co/amZP5kNhCS