Finding signal on Twitter is more difficult than it used to be. We curate the best tweets on topics like AI, startups, and product development every weekday so you can focus on what matters.
PLUS: SaaS is cooked, wrappers are printing
OpenClaw shipped 100+ fixes with Gemini 3.1 and massive security hardening while Karpathy called them a noun.
OpenClaw's ordering frenzy created an Apple Mac shortage. High memory units now ship in six days to six weeks.
Hacker News is still just personal attacks and toxic threads. Some things never change.
AI companies asking for calls to discuss OpenClaw integration are missing the point. Make a PR or build a plugin.
Hard to respect devs who never ship anything, no matter how much they talk about building.
Gemini 3.1 Pro is the smartest model ever made and genuinely awful to actually use.
AI makes writing code easier than ever, but the hard parts of software engineering are still very hard.
Guillermo thinks Creation as a Service beats Software as a Service. Nobody wants lowest common denominator software, they want platforms that work for them.
Marc Lou's TrustMRR hit 7,000 daily visitors, his most visited website ever.
Greg Isenberg thinks AI skills marketplaces will look like app stores circa 2009. Ugly, fragmented, wildly lucrative, full of one person shops doing millions.
AI startup making zero dollars sold for $250 in just 10 days from listing. The market is wild.
Most people fail online because they're invisible, not because they don't post. They post the same stuff as everyone else.
Too worried about being hated makes it hard to make anything that people love.
Ethan Mollick thinks phone OSs will change. He wants to talk to a good agent for all tasks instead of using legacy apps.
Andrew Chen wants OpenClaw for personal finance that integrates banks, understands taxes, monitors portfolios, and reads company news automatically.
The cost of opening a PR dropped to zero. Now tons of draft PRs wait for attention. The bottleneck isn't creation, it's reviewing.
Shadcn's new CLI outputs links to docs, source, and examples for any component. Combined with skills, your LLM has context to generate and fix components.
The smartest play isn't using OpenClaw, it's selling pre-configured wrappers to people who don't want to spend 10 hours setting it up.
Vibe coding is more exhausting than traditional coding, actually.
Build an agent that literally is your ideal customer. Train it on transcripts and comments, then run your content through it for real feedback.
Turn hours of scrolling into a five minute read.