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Content Academy

13.8k members • Free

37 contributions to Content Academy
BETTER and more SECURE OpenClaw (Moltbot)
I built my own AI agent, it's called the Pope Bot, and it works kind of like OpenClaw (Moltbot) but with two big differences: it's more secure and way more scalable. Here's the basic idea: You send the bot a task (via API, Telegram, whatever). The bot creates a branch in GitHub with that job. GitHub Actions picks it up, spins up a container, runs the task, and checks everything back into the repo when it's done. Nothing runs on your computer. It runs in the cloud. Your API keys? Stored securely in GitHub Secrets. They get injected at runtime and don't just sit around exposed somewhere. And like OpenClaw it can modify itself. I told it to add a scheduled task (a cron job) to run every 30 minutes. It figured out how to update its own config, pushed the changes back to the repo, and now it just... does that. On its own. It also builds its own tools over time. Say you tell it to check your email. It doesn't have a tool for that yet. So it looks at the API, figures out the call, writes the code, and saves that skill back into the repo. Next time? It already knows how. It only figures it out once. So your bot gets smarter the more you use it. And because everything lives in Git, if you ever wanted to share your assistant with someone, you just share the repo. They swap out their keys and they're exactly where you are. I'm working on getting this out to you all as soon as I can. It's one of those things that's easier to build than explain — but more coming shortly.
BETTER and more SECURE OpenClaw (Moltbot)
2 likes • 5d
That’s my kid. 😊
The Power of Context And Gut Instinct in a World of Infinite Advice
In today's information-saturated world, we face a paradox: unlimited access to advice yet increasing confusion about which path to follow. This reality reveals a crucial truth that's often overlooked: **there is no right way without context**. Without context, there is no right way. Why is this concept so vital right now? With the overwhelming amount of information bombarding us daily, with countless experts offering contradictory advice, navigation becomes nearly impossible. While there certainly exists an optimal path for each individual at any specific moment, that path can only be identified with proper context. This context includes crucial questions: Is the person giving advice qualified to do so? Is the recipient at the right stage to implement it? Does the advice actually address the specific problem at hand? In our current landscape, advice flows freely without these contextual boundaries. Solutions are presented as universal truths without regard for who's listening, their experience level, or their actual challenges. Without this essential framing, even the most well-intentioned guidance becomes meaningless and potentially distracting. The hierarchy of advice further complicates matters. What benefits beginners often hinders experts. Guidance designed to elevate intermediates to advanced status proves useless or counterproductive for newcomers, even when it sounds compelling. Priorities shift dramatically across experience levels—what's crucial for professional athletes may be irrelevant for beginners. Adding to this confusion, some individuals misrepresent their experience, offering advice that genuinely applies to no one. So how do we navigate this maze of contextless guidance? Two paths emerge: 1. **Actively seek context** - Determine whether investing time to gather the complete picture is worthwhile for your situation. 2. **Trust your intuition** - Perhaps the most underutilized resource in modern society is our own internal guidance system.
4 likes • Apr '25
Listening to yourself in order to access that internal guidance system is a learned skill. It usually requires taking time alone and being quiet for that wisdom to surface. Sure, a bolt of insight occasionally arrives out of the blue. But learning to “hear” what’s going on inside can be accomplished. There’s a wealth of guidance there which develops over time as years of learning and person experiences come together.
😂 Video Bloopers—2,000+ Videos And It's Still HARD
Hoping this helps someone, it's not easy, keep going.
3 likes • Mar '25
This reminds me of the saying about the difference between an amateur photographer and a professional photographer. The professional shows only his best shots.
1 like • Mar '25
Not quite yet, Michael. 😊
The Video I Posted Yesterday Was AI—Anyone Notice?
Thoughts, comments on the video? If someone did notice they didn't make any comment on the original, see original post here
The Video I Posted Yesterday Was AI—Anyone Notice?
1 like • Mar '25
@Stephen G. Pope haha!
The Illusion of Productivity: I wasted 10,000 Hours.
It’s funny looking back—after I sold my previous company I developed an ego, I told myself how great I was. But in reality all my business choices were total failures and bad moves. I spent a lot of time on ridiculous things—obsessing over a business card that no one would ever see, redoing my website over and over and over, changing my taglines endlessly. What’s the name of my business? Oh, I’d get different domain names. Everything except actually doing business. And even as I got through those things, I just kept making more and more mistakes. I was doing things that didn’t matter, avoiding the truly hard part, which was simply talking to a lot of people really fast and selling them stuff. That was the only thing that actually moved the needle, but I wasn’t doing it. Instead, I was keeping myself "busy." Of course, you can imagine that all this work didn’t do anything. So what did I think? That I wasn’t being productive enough. That I just couldn’t get enough done. And that became my main problem—or so I thought. Since I believed that was the issue, I started looking for all the optimization techniques. Getting up early, setting routines, journaling—all the things that everyone says you need to do. And that just became one more thing. And sure, all of that optimization matters—but only if you’re at least doing the right things in the first place. And that’s the key: The biggest productivity boost you can make today is simply to only do the things you need to do. Nothing else. I don’t know why it’s so hard for us to do that. Self-sabotage? Fear of failure? Maybe. But we don’t always see it. Instead of trying to optimize your life, there’s no point in even doing that until you’re actually working on the right things. So then the only question to ask is: What is the right thing to work on? And while that is different for everyone, the scariest part of that question is that I rarely look to myself to answer it. It was just the endless scrolling of social media that would leave me confused as to what to do. I’d take in all these different opinions, strategies, and ideas, and instead of finding clarity, I’d end up more lost than before.
The Illusion of Productivity: I wasted 10,000 Hours.
3 likes • Feb '25
“And that’s the key: The biggest productivity boost you can make today is simply to only do the things you need to do. Nothing else.” This can be applied to every aspect of life. Not just business. Imagine how simple that would be.
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Diane Cooley
4
40points to level up
@diane-cooley-4765
Retired clinical social worker here helping out Steve wherever my skills are of use. Hanging out on skool for insights into what you all are building.

Active 5d ago
Joined Apr 14, 2023
ISFJ
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