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🔒 Q&A w/ Nate is happening in 4 days
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🚀New Video: I Turned Claude Opus 4.8 Into My Entire AI Operating System
In this video I show you how I turned Claude Opus 4.8 into my full AI operating system that runs my businesses, holds all my context, and replaces the constant tab switching between apps. I walk through the Four C's I use to build it (context, connections, capabilities, cadence), the mindset shift of working out of Claude Code by default, how I organize files and skills, and the bike method for safely giving agents more autonomy. By the end you'll know exactly how to set up your own AI OS and the trap to avoid when you start handing it real keys. GITHUB REPO
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If you've ever felt "AI Overwhelm", please read this.
Every single person following AI right now is overwhelmed. Including me. I make videos about this stuff for a living and I still feel the pressure. New model drops. New framework. New feature update. It feels like every single day. But after hearing a ton of you guys bring up "AI overwhelm" week after week, I realized this: → There's a HUGE difference between knowing the "what" and knowing the "how." Staying aware does not mean testing everything. Most new tools and features only need the "what." You see the title. You understand what it does. You move on. The "how" is reserved for the stuff that solves a problem you actually have right now. So when something new drops, I ask myself one question: Does this solve a specific pain point I'm currently dealing with? If yes, I test it in a real scenario. I test it against something that actually matters to me. If no, I save the link. I mentally file it away. And I keep walking. Because here's the thing. Your north star is probably very different from mine. Part of my job is to experiment, form opinions, and share what I think is useful. So naturally I test a lot of stuff. But if your north star is building a business or getting better at your craft, then every shiny new tool might just be a distraction. The number one mistake I see people make is they try to learn everything. They watch every video. They test every tool. They jump to the next thing before the last thing even had a chance to work. And if I've contributed to your overwhelm with my daily uploads, I apologize. hehe. But a lot of people think that this ties directly into how you measure your day. Productivity is not how many hours you worked. It's how many meaningful outputs you created that actually moved the needle towards your north star. Someone can work 12 hours one day and feel insanely productive, but they were just watching tutorials and playing around with new tools. Meanwhile someone else sits down for 5 hours, ships the one thing that actually matters, and makes more progress.
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🏆 Weekly Wins Recap | May 16 – May 22
From first client wins and live workflows to AI voice agents, portfolio momentum, and production-level fixes - this week inside AIS+ showed what happens when builders keep stacking reps consistently. 🚀 Standout Wins of the Week inside AIS+ 👉 @Michael Garcia closed his first major deal with a wholesale real estate automation engine handling property sourcing, Claude-based deal scoring, and investor pipeline management. 👉 @Luca Giovinazzo delivered his first full client project live — including 11 n8n workflows, CRM systems, Telegram bots, inventory tracking, booking systems, and KPI dashboards for an auto detailing business. 👉 @Paulo Calpatura built a fully automated AI voice receptionist using Vapi, n8n, Claude, Google Maps, Google Calendar, Google Sheets, and ElevenLabs. 👉 Bo Gonzales presented two AI builds internally, stood out in front of 79 employees, and ended up in a 30-minute AI strategy conversation with his CEO. 👉 @Shatadru Majumdar joined just 7 days ago and already completed multiple AIS+ modules while shipping a customer-support workflow using n8n + Claude. 🎥 Super Win Spotlight | @Griffin Maklansky Griffin joined AIS+ after getting laid off and within a month and a half, landed a new AI-focused role. What started it all? Watching Nate’s “Master 95% of Claude Code in 36 Minutes” video and realizing how quickly AI could turn ideas into real products. Since joining, Griffin has: - Built his own personal website to stand out while job hunting - Started learning AI automation seriously despite having no traditional dev background - Used Nate’s templates and systems to level up his Claude workflows - Connected with builders inside the community and started taking real conversations around opportunities - Went from laid off to employed again with a strong salary in under 45 days
🏆 Weekly Wins Recap | May 16 – May 22
Day 6 Done - #AISChallenge
Tested the schedule and loop features with some simple ideas. I didn't have any ongoing skills or tasks running that needed to be scheduled. So, I decided to test this with my MCPs connected in Claude - Gmail and Canva. Scheduled a task to check my inbox everyday and give me a highlight of what needs immediate attention. Worked like a charm. Simple and effective. Also, wanted to see if this can be used to create something like social media posts. So, scheduled a task with Canva MCP to create a post everyday on a specific task. The test run went create. I need to create this into a project and see how the self-improving function runs. Also, tested the loop command with a simple idea. Worked great. On to the final one tomorrow.
Day 6 Done - #AISChallenge
How I applied the knowledge I gained in AIS to fuel my passion for fitness nutrition
Hey AI community members, how are you doing? ^^ So I'm an AIS+ member, and over the past couple of months I've been going through Nate's content, learning as much as I could about Claude, n8n, skills MCPs, Firecrawl, Vercel, and all the stuff that you guys are also going through. 😂 Like some of you here, I'm trying to set up an AI automation agency, and it's going well, but on the side I wanted to do something a bit more fun as well. So I work for a software company, and as a side hobby I travel around the world to race in Hyrox, marathons, and triathlons. I've always been very interested in fitness and nutrition in general, as well as fat loss and how to gain muscle while losing weight at the same time, which is always a big challenge. So last year, what I did was I took a certification to become a personal trainer and sports nutritionist and I was like, wait a minute, this could be a good concept for a Skool community. There is so much noise out there and conflicting advice from people with a big following but no qualification. So what I did was I used Claude Design to build my external landing page. I used Heygen MCP connected to Claude to generate the VSLs, while Claude was also handling the copywriting. Claude also helped me create the slides using Hyperframes with the narration of the lessons done with my cloned voice in ElevenLabs (Claude called the API directly). Claude also generated a worksheet based on my input and other things that I know about fitness nutrition. All the images for the lessons were generated with Kie.ai, and Claude is also connected to Tally to generate the quizzes. So now the Skool community has a main course about fuel foundations to teach people the basics of nutrition, including micronutrients and the essentials of fat loss. There are other mini courses that focus on: - how to fuel properly if you have a 9-to-5 job - how to hydrate properly throughout the day - other courses on fat loss and race day fuel for people who need to get ready for an endurance race like Hyrox or a half marathon
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