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Start here. Read this first.
Welcome to the AI Untapped Workshop. This is the room behind the newsletter and the YouTube channel. The whole point: cut through the AI noise, faster, together. Here's what lives here: → One new tool + prompt every Sunday. Posted in the feed. Copy, paste, run it. → The Field Notes: five short PDFs covering local AI setup, prompt patterns, the skip list, the maker stack, and the Sunday routine. Find them in the Classroom tab (top nav) or scroll the feed today, where each one is posted separately so you can ask questions in the comments. → An open thread where you drop the AI tools you're testing and what's actually working. → Behind-the-scenes context I don't put on YouTube. What I'm asking from you: → Post what you're testing. Wins and failures both. The room learns faster when we're honest. → No pitching. No "I built an agency, DM me." This is a workshop, not a marketplace. → If a prompt works, drop the result in the comments. If it breaks, drop the error. I'm here daily. Drop a hello below and tell me one thing you're trying to figure out with AI right now. I read every reply. — Dusty
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House rules. Read once, refer back.
Three rules. That's it. 1. POST WHAT YOU'RE TESTING. Wins and failures both. A "this broke and I don't know why" post is worth more than a "look at this cool thing" post. The room learns from honest data. 2. NO SELF-PROMO WITHOUT VALUE. If you have an agency, course, or tool, you can mention it once in your intro post and never again. No DMs to other members trying to sell. This is a workshop, not a marketplace. If this is your acquisition channel, you'll be removed. 3. NO LOW-EFFORT POSTS. "Best AI tool?" with no context. "Anyone using Claude?" with no follow-up. Posts that don't move anyone forward get removed. Ask specific questions, share specific results. That's all of it. If you're not sure whether something fits, post it and we'll talk. The line isn't policed by gotchas, it's policed by quality. — Dusty
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What's coming. The roadmap.
Where this room is heading: NOW (this month): → Weekly tool + prompt drops every Sunday → Field Notes archive available to every member → Open Q&A — drop any AI question in the feed, I'll answer → The newsletter ships every Sunday (aiuntapped.ai, 5-min read) NEXT (the coming weeks): → First live workshop call. Bring your stuck prompts and we debug them together. Free for everyone who's in the room early. → Skool Games entry — when this room hits 100 active members, we compete. → A paid tier ("AI Untapped Pro") for people who want the full stack: pre-built workflows, working Claude projects, weekly office hours, and the behind-the-scenes archive. Not launching yet. Free tier stays free, forever! The free room is the front door. It's not a stepping stone you have to leave. Stay here as long as it's useful. One ask: reply below with the AI problem you wish someone would solve for you. I read every reply, and the most common answers shape what gets dropped next. — Dusty
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A free AI just beat a top paid one (and anyone can use it)
Quick one that matters if you ever worry about AI getting too expensive. A new model called GLM-5.2 was just released for free. Anyone can use it, and companies can even run it on their own computers at no license cost. The interesting part: on certain coding tasks it scored higher than GPT-5.5, one of the big paid models, while costing roughly one sixth as much to run. In plain terms, the free and open side of AI is catching up fast to the expensive paid side. That is good news for normal people. More competition usually means better tools and lower prices for everyone. You do not need to switch anything today. The takeaway is simpler: you are not stuck paying premium prices to get strong AI. The cheap and free options are getting genuinely good. Have you tried any free AI tools that surprised you with how good they were? Tell us which one below.
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SpaceX just bought an AI coding tool for 60 billion dollars
Here is a headline almost nobody saw coming. SpaceX, the rocket company, has agreed to buy an AI coding tool called Cursor for 60 billion dollars. Cursor is a program that writes and fixes computer code for you. You type what you want in plain English and it builds it. A lot of developers swear by it. So why would a rocket company want it? The short version: every big company now wants AI building things in house instead of renting it from someone else. Owning the tool means owning the speed. This is one of the largest deals ever in the AI world, and it landed just days after SpaceX went public on the stock market. The bigger picture for the rest of us: the everyday tools people use are becoming so valuable that the biggest companies on earth will pay a fortune to own them. What is the one AI tool you would be sad to lose if it vanished tomorrow? Drop it in the comments.
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