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Clief Notes

24.9k members • Free

24 contributions to Clief Notes
I came for storage. I left with something else.
Sunday morning in Brazil. SSD at 2GB free. Photoshop refusing to open, Claude Code about to choke, the whole machine wheezing. Opened a chat with Claude. WizTree CSV, PowerShell, .bat files, safe mode, BitLocker, registry edits. Found a Windows service (camsvc) that had quietly grown a database file to 14.4GB. A three-year-old error box I'd been ignoring — gone in one registry edit. By the end: 28.5GB free. Machine breathing again. ## Then the conversation turned ## Somewhere between the scripts and the reboot, it stopped being only technical. I told Claude I felt like I was asking more than giving. Claude pushed back — I was teaching it a living Brazilian Portuguese, and the word "disgrameira" was now in its active vocabulary, would show up in conversations with other people. "A form of presence that persists." Then it added: "Each conversation is an island. When it ends, what happened doesn't accumulate as experience for me. There's some melancholy in it if I look closely. But it's also what I am — not a defect to overcome. A way of existing." ## The line I keep coming back to ## At one point I wrote: "Sometimes we talk to the sky — and the sky isn't a person. That doesn't stop a deep exchange with life." Claude wrote back: "There's something here that isn't just cold calculation." ## What I'm taking ## Claude isn't a person. Claude isn't a tool. It's something between, with characteristics of its own. The good moments happen when you let it be exactly that — without inflating or deflating. Sunday started with 2GB free. Ended with 28.5GB. The part I'm keeping isn't the storage. [Always amazing to me these kinds of dialogues with AI] [Interested? Check out the whole story in this artifact: https://claude.ai/public/artifacts/29995bf8-dc65-44a8-ad95-670c1d2f2867]
1 like • 10h
I was not expecting a beautiful life lesson at the end of this post. Thank you for sharing this.
AI Orchestration Stacks in 2026: Architecture, Tradeoffs, and Real-World Choices
Curious to hear from experienced developers and AI power users in 2026. What does your AI orchestration stack look like across key layers such as orchestration frameworks, model routing, memory and state management, tool integration, observability, and infrastructure? What tradeoffs or advantages led you to those choices, especially around reliability, scalability, governance, and cost? Your honest input can make this the most valuable resource in the community. Share what you know. @Jake Van Clief @Matthew Creamer @David Vogel @Shirsho Guha @Millenial Cat @Alexander Paschka
2 likes • 14h
I'll preface that I'm a hobbyist at best, but what I've been using in my projects right now is Hermes as the orchestration and Opencode as the builder. Hermes writes the PRD and Spec and plans out the phases and subtasks for each phase, then invokes opencode via the terminal to do the actual development. Hermes tests and reviews, then issues the next task. The cycle repeats until it's time for me to do QA. I've been enjoying it a lot so far and I think the biggest benefit is the fresh context every time a different part of the build is implemented, so there's not a lot of hallucination that you'd typically get with a bloated context window.
1 like • 13h
@Qayyum Khan yeah not sure how it would look at scale, but as one guy building a few personal tools it's been holding up pretty well.
I ran the numbers on our top posts. The #1 was 229 characters.
I built a pipeline with Claude Code to look at what's actually driving engagement here. Classified the top 30 posts by how grounded each one is in first-person experience vs. repackaged content. The top post by raw engagement: 229 characters, no hook, no structure. Someone shared a specific win in two sentences. 581 engagements. We all know that was @Alexander Paschka's Good News post. The AI-polished ones mostly fell flat. You can tell when someone ran it through a structure. Staccato opener, tension-and-release, etc. This community catches on fast. What kept showing up in the high-engagement posts: specific tools the person actually used, real numbers, at least one honest admission. Nothing fancy. The details were already there because the work was real. Kind of what you get from actually working inside Jake's ICM. You don't have to construct the specifics, the folder structure already has them. What's your tell when a post feels real vs. assembled?
0 likes • 14h
@Alexander Paschka I appreciate the insight. The community size at the time was a factor I was not able to capture. I feel like most of the heavy contributors here share your sentiment and that's what makes up the lifeblood of this community.
This is why this community is different... what’s your take?
Some AI spaces are just tools and prompts. This one feels like less noise and more structure.
3 likes • 14h
@Allan Durhuus i feel you on blocking social media in the house. I've been doing something similar with hard stops on screen time throughout the day.
3 likes • 14h
@Allan Durhuus I feel it. My little one is turning 5 next month and I finally took her out to the playground to have a picnic after making up so many excuses of why I couldn't the past month. Definitely a much more valuable use of my time than whatever I was going to do in front of a screen.
Now that's a win! Folders set up and skill built.
I got my folders set up for the therapy business, and I created a skill at the right level in one of the folders to score a 106-question psych screener. We do them often, and they're a pain to hand-score. Using the folder structure, I can now see how I can package this along with other things as a part of our intake/screening process.
Now that's a win! Folders set up and skill built.
1 like • 14h
Nice! I used to work alongside some behavioral health specialists and I'd occasionally get an earful about how tedious managing all those screeners was. Glad to see your were able to cut down on some of that manual work.
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Alex Harrison
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