User
Write something
🔒 Q&A w/ Nate is happening in 3 days
Pinned
🚀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
Pinned
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.
Pinned
🏆 Weekly Wins Recap | May 23 – May 29
From $64K+ in closed deals to first paid projects, first workflows, and first technical builds - this week inside AIS+ showed what happens when builders stop consuming and start moving. Some wins were big money. Some were first steps. Both matter. 🚀 Standout Wins of the Week inside AIS+ 👉 @Jacob West closed two deals in one week — a $22.5K custom software build for a local gym and a $42K AI OS rollout for a mid-market energy business. 👉 @Luca Giovinazzo delivered his first full client project live — 11 n8n workflows, CRM, Telegram bot, inventory alerts, booking system, KPI tracking, user guide, and Loom walkthrough. 👉 @Fadwa Naboulssi landed her first client three weeks into the community — a candidate sourcing workflow on a $150-per-successful-hire commission. 👉 @George Maitland completed his first technical build using Claude Code + n8n MCP — a local content engine with Telegram as the command center. 👉 @James O Neill built a free portfolio site for a friend-of-a-friend’s side hustle… and she insisted on paying anyway. First real money landed. ⸻ 🎥 Super Win Spotlight | @Josh Holladay Josh joined AIS+ because he wanted more than scattered learning. He wanted momentum. Focused content. Better access. And a room full of people actually moving. Since joining, he has: - Closed real client work - Built stronger confidence around pricing and value - Used the portfolio course to get clear on where he was and what needed to happen next - Learned how to turn client conversations into real business opportunities - Found a place to celebrate wins with people who actually understand the journey
🏆 Weekly Wins Recap | May 23 – May 29
Anthropic just raised $65 billion at a $965 billion valuation.
That's the second-largest private funding round in history, behind only OpenAI. The new valuation puts Anthropic ahead of OpenAI as the most valuable AI company in the world, private or public. Quick transparency up front. I'm not a private equity guy. No insider info on Anthropic. Just trying to make sense of this out loud. Here's what I see happening. Most companies raise pre-seed, seed, then Series A through D. After that they either IPO, get acquired, or run out of road. Anthropic just hit Series H. That isn't necessarily an indication of good or bad. Stripe and SpaceX stayed private on purpose to avoid public-market scrutiny. Slack and Lyft reached Series H and IPO'd within a year. Every company takes a different path. What it does tell you: Anthropic chose to stay private through eight rounds. Bloomberg reported an IPO could come as soon as October of this year. Anthropic's annual revenue jumped from $1 billion in December 2024 to $47 billion this month. Widely cited as the fastest revenue ramp of any software company in history. They now run higher revenue than OpenAI, and the latest projections show them hitting profitability first. Not saying one is "winning" here. Both are still burning billions a year. But the underdog framing for Anthropic is getting harder to defend. What this news has me thinking about is why a company growing this fast still needs another $65 billion. The answer is compute. Dario (the CEO) said it himself a few weeks ago. They planned for 10x growth in 2026. They saw 80x. They literally cannot build datacenters fast enough. Earlier this month, Anthropic leased the entire Colossus 1 datacenter in Memphis from SpaceX. 300 megawatts, over 220,000 Nvidia GPUs, $1.25 billion a month. They didn't pick SpaceX over Amazon or Google. Colossus was the only compute available right now. The rest doesn't come online until 2027. This Series H also brought chip manufacturers Samsung, SK Hynix, and Micron on as investors. Those three make the high-bandwidth memory that sits on every Nvidia GPU. Getting them invested locks in supply at the most constrained part of the chip stack.
Best builder in the room
Anyone feel this too? But I learned from personal experience... you can be the best builder in the room and still have an empty sales calendar. (and that wasn't by design lol) Thought i'd share a tip to the skilled AI dev peers in here whose builds get likes, but not a ton of clients. I've learned the main problem is that not enough people know of you yet. Watch it and tell me if you feel more “skilled” or “known” right now.
Best builder in the room
1-30 of 17,864
AI Automation Society
skool.com/ai-automation-society
Learn to get paid for AI solutions, regardless of your background.
Leaderboard (30-day)
Powered by