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5 votes
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Linux in space: An overview and what's coming next
7 votes -
Inside the rebuilt Scrubs hospital with Zach Braff, Donald Faison, and Sarah Chalke
19 votes -
Iceland is one of the few western countries that has never hosted a professional boxing fight. That ends on April 10.
4 votes -
California’s new bill requires Department of Justice-approved 3D printers that report on themselves
52 votes -
Laufey feat. BBC Concert Orchestra – How I Get (2026)
4 votes -
Weekly thread for casual chat and photos of pets
This is the place for casual discussion about our pets. Photos are welcome, show us your pet(s) and tell us about them!
11 votes -
Media Do International to acquire Seven Seas Entertainment
4 votes -
Why Namibia exceeded all our expectations | First days driving across Africa’s emptiest country
21 votes -
TV’s TV (1987) & TV Games Encyclopedia (1988)
11 votes -
Stone Age boy in Sweden was buried in deerskin and a woodpecker headdress, archaeologists discover
11 votes -
The US Library of Congress has found and restored a long-lost silent film by Georges Méliès
21 votes -
Angine de Poitrine - Sarniezz (2026)
8 votes -
Device that can extract 1,000 liters of clean water a day from desert air revealed by 2025 Nobel Prize winner
57 votes -
Humble Comic Bundle: Dive into DC's Vertigo Comics
8 votes -
Dan Simmons, author of the Hyperion Cantos, dies aged 77
36 votes -
Inside Anthropic’s killer-robot dispute with the US Pentagon (gifted link)
24 votes -
Midweek Movie Free Talk
Warning: this post may contain spoilers
Have you watched any movies recently you want to discuss? Any films you want to recommend or are hyped about? Feel free to discuss anything here.
Please just try to provide fair warning of spoilers if you can.
8 votes -
Google quantum-proofs HTTPS by squeezing 15kB of data into 700-byte space
26 votes -
My personal AI assistant project
Let me start off by saying that I'm exhausted by AI hype. Being interested in LLM agent technology (AI agent hereafter for brevity) means skimming over a lot of hype for one or two useful, semi...
Let me start off by saying that I'm exhausted by AI hype. Being interested in LLM agent technology (AI agent hereafter for brevity) means skimming over a lot of hype for one or two useful, semi reality based, bits of information. Maybe the part that I find the most frustrating is how effective the hype is. I don't know if there's ever been a hype cycle like this. Probably a big part of the reason for that is the internet has already proven, within living memory for most people, that technological revolutions really can change everything. Or mess everything up. Either way they generate a lot of economic activity.
So this post is not that. I'm not going to tell you about how AI agents are the second coming for Christ. I'm not selling anything.
Fairly early into learning about AI agents I wanted a way to connect to the agent remotely without hosting it somewhere or exposing ports to the internet. I settled on tailscale and a remote terminal and moved on, I rarely used it. Somehow the tiny friction of "Turn on tailscale, open terminal app, connect, run agent" was enough to make it not feel worth it.
I know I'm far from the only person who had the same "I want it remote" thought, the best evidence: OpenClaw. It's just one of those things that everyone naturally converges on.
If you're not familiar with OpenClaw, the TLDR is: Former founder with more money than he'll ever need vibecodes a bridge between instant messenger apps and LLM APIs. Nothing about it is technically challenging or requires solving any particularly hard problems. It almost immediately becomes the fastest growing GitHub repo of all time and is currently at number 14 for number of stars. It blew up the (tech) internet like very few things ever have. Within months he was hired by Open AI.
OpenClaw now does more than just connect messaging and agents, but I believe that one piece is the killer feature. My tailscale terminal solution, combined with a scheduled task or a cron job and some context files could already do all of the things that OpenClaw can do, and countless people had already implemented similar solutions. But I think it was the tiny bit of friction OpenClaw removed that was responsible for a lot its popularity.
I thought that was interesting but I have no interest in the security nightmare that is OpenClaw, or the "sentience" vibe for that matter, so I built my own tool.
Essentially it's just a light secondary harness combined with a bridge between Signal and Claude Code. It does some other things too, things I wished existing harnesses did, some memory and guidelines, automated prompts and reminders to wake the agent up and have it do stuff, some context to give the agent some level of persistence, make it less LLMy, less annoying. None of that is particularly interesting though.
Once I got it working (MVP took less than a day) and started playing with it, the OpenClaw phenomenon made a lot more sense. Somehow having the agent in a chat interface, with almost zero friction (just open the chat and send something) was cooler than it had any reason to be.
I can't explain it any better than that at the moment. Not only was it kinda fun, it lent itself to a whole range of "what ifs". What if it could do X? What if I wrote a tool that gave it Y capability? I've been experiencing that for some time, but somehow agent in your pocket has a different feeling.
Here's an example of a "what if". What if it could do our grocery shopping? I definitely want that. I already had a custom browser tool that I built for agent coding assistance so I was most of the way there. It was just a matter of teaching the agent to login and navigate a website, something they're already trained to do. Some hand holding, a few helper scripts, and an evening's worth of hours later and I had it working. The agent can respond to a shopping request by building a shopping list based on our most recent orders, presenting it to us for approval/edits in a Signal group chat, doing searches for any additional product requests and adding the finalized order to the cart. It could also checkout the order and schedule the delivery time but I'm doing the last 2 clicks manually for the time being. It's an idiot savant, it seems like a bad idea to give it access to my credit card. Maybe eventually.
The fact that I can handle shopping with a couple of signal messages feels effortless in a way that handling shopping by connecting to my PC terminal remotely via tailscale terminal wouldn't have. Especially when I can include people in the loop who have no interest in tailscaling anywhere. Everyone can use messaging apps.
I imagine before long solutions like this will be built in, either in the grocery websites and apps, or into the frontier harnesses themselves. There will probably be agents everywhere, for better or worse. Probably I'll wish that the agents would all fuck off. In the meantime it's exciting how easy it is to get these tools to do useful things.
33 votes -
What games have you been playing, and what's your opinion on them?
What have you been playing lately? Discussion about video games and board games are both welcome. Please don't just make a list of titles, give some thoughts about the game(s) as well.
27 votes -
What creative projects have you been working on?
This topic is part of a series. It is meant to be a place for users to discuss creative projects they have been working on. Projects can be personal, professional, physical, digital, or even just...
This topic is part of a series. It is meant to be a place for users to discuss creative projects they have been working on.
Projects can be personal, professional, physical, digital, or even just ideas.
If you have any creative projects that you have been working on or want to eventually work on, this is a place for discussing those.
12 votes -
I made a word game - and it has come a long way
46 votes -
Google’s AI overviews can scam you. Here’s how to stay safe.
25 votes -
Microsoft is the carbon removal market
13 votes -
Photons that aren’t actually there influence superconductivity
15 votes -
Sony’s Bluepoint pitched ‘Bloodborne’ remake before closure
15 votes -
Linda Lampenius x Pete Parkkonen – Liekinheitin (2026)
4 votes -
microgpt - GPT in 200 lines
32 votes -
Zwyntar - Потяг на Південь (2025)
4 votes -
Humble Book Bundle: Charlie Jane Anders & Annalee Newitz by TOR
9 votes -
Writers who don't read books: a response
17 votes -
How to take full-page screenshots in Chrome on any device - it's easy and free
9 votes -
Palantir sues Swiss magazine for accurately reporting that the Swiss government didn’t want Palantir
38 votes -
The fifty most underappreciated movies of the 21st century
20 votes -
Jonas Lovv – Ya Ya Ya (2026)
6 votes -
Norway's sovereign wealth fund impressed by artificial intelligence's ability to catch risks overlooked by both the media and external vendors
11 votes -
Babylon 5 is now free to watch on YouTube
54 votes -
AI’s memorization crisis
24 votes -
World Nature Photography Awards 2026 winners
11 votes -
When video games were brown
27 votes -
I took coloring books way too seriously
8 votes -
'Exceptionally rare' Roman lead blocks found on farmland in Wales
20 votes -
Inside the quixotic team trying to build an entire world in a twenty-year-old game
20 votes -
Cash-issuing terminals
9 votes -
Apple brings age verification to UK users in iOS 26.4
29 votes -
Anthropic rejects latest US Pentagon offer: ‘We cannot in good conscience accede to their request’
61 votes -
BMW Group to deploy humanoid robots in production in Germany for the first time
10 votes -
Anyone get into caffeine (coffee/tea) as an adult?
There's a lot of stories of people getting off caffeine and documenting the changes and benefits they experienced. But I'm wondering if anyone has gotten on caffeine as an adult and could share...
There's a lot of stories of people getting off caffeine and documenting the changes and benefits they experienced. But I'm wondering if anyone has gotten on caffeine as an adult and could share what benefits, if any, they gained. For reference, I've never consumed much caffeine and have been debating doing so. In terms of actual work and school, I've never found the need. But, I'm generally a bit lethargic/slow paced by nature (have trouble getting up in the morning, inefficient with my time especially when I don't have much going on) and maybe a light jolt and ritual in the morning would be worthwhile.
35 votes -
Texans love Big Bend for its wildness. Donald Trump wants to put a wall through it.
16 votes