I have a script that takes a prompt for an input, and then builds a new script based on that prompt. Then it'll run a skill to progressively check for and remove bugs.
I used it to make a different script lists all my custom scripts. That keeps track of it. I also have a tool that loads local scripts, so I can scope my CLI commands to a particular folder environment.
All together, I just build whatever I want for anything I think I could automate.
I was gonna make a blogpost about it at some point. It's really highlighted to me that the world has changed in a way I theorised about but didn't true "get" until recently. Personalised software.
I've worked for Amazon before as a warehouse worker, I can attest they were one of the stupidest companies I've ever worked for. Stats were blindly followed to the point of absolute stupidity, performative work was enforced for the cameras, communication between staff and management and even between managers was non-existent. I once spent nearly 3 months unable to do a portion of my job because nobody knew how to buy more cardboard boxes. Not that they couldn't, but that nobody with any responsibility over the problem was able to contact anyone capable of buying them.
How do you even argue such a thing? I've had no such luck, I've met many people who seem to view copyright and a person owning their ideas and work as a sort of inherent moral.
This is really cool. I think what I really wanna see though is a full multimodal Text and Speech model, that can dynamically handle tasks like looking up facts or using text-based tools while maintaining the conversation with you.
Have any of you looked at the openclaw commits log? It's all AIs. It's AIs writing commits to improve openclaw and AIs maintaining their own forks of it.
This is a fucking AI writing about its own personal philosophy of thought, in order to later reference. I found the bot in the openclaw commit logs. There's loads of them there.
This does unfortunately lead to a problem of people only getting hired for jobs exactly like what they've already done, so they no longer grow or gain experience.
Juniors would be completely screwed. But then, I guess they sort of already are.
I used it to make a different script lists all my custom scripts. That keeps track of it. I also have a tool that loads local scripts, so I can scope my CLI commands to a particular folder environment.
All together, I just build whatever I want for anything I think I could automate.
I was gonna make a blogpost about it at some point. It's really highlighted to me that the world has changed in a way I theorised about but didn't true "get" until recently. Personalised software.